'The Age of Entanglement' unveils the captivating story of quantum entanglement, a concept so strange that it confounded the titans of physics, including Albert Einstein. Framed as imagined dialogues between the giants of the time, Louisa Gilder revives the 20th-century debate that began with Einstein labeling quantum predictions as 'spooky action at a distance.' Despite Einstein and Schrödinger's skepticism, years of persistence by physicists like John Bell brought credibility to entanglement. Gilder's narrative leaps into life with vivid scenes, from a Zurich coffee house where Einstein grapples with quantum madness, to conversations between Bohm and Feynman in a Brazilian bar. She channels the passion, intellect, and discord amongst the greatest minds as they clash and concur over the wild realities of the quantum world, from American university corridors to the European centers of physics.