Friday, October 9, 2015

Einstein: His Space and Times / Steven Gimbel 191 pp.

One doesn't have to be a genius to make Einstein's story interesting, but a writer has to be skilled to distill its many events, both scientific and personal, into 191 pp. while conveying the sense of a flesh and blood human being.  It's my near-constant complaint about biographies; most give you a lot of information about the person without making you feel that you know the person.  Gimbel scores high on my biographo-meter, using judicious details about Einstein's appearance, habits, and opinions to color events many of us are familiar with on the page in black and white: the world-changing papers produced by the Zurich patent clerk, the science wars over relativity and quantum mechanics, and Einstein's ambivalence over Judaism, Zionism, and pacifism.  I can't say whether Gimbel's explanations of Einstein's theories are entirely apt, but they are certainly as clearly written as others I've read for the non-scientist, and admirably concise.

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