Rating:  Summary: I can not say enough good things about this book Review: A truly outstanding account of an exceptional individual. Einstein???s way of thinking and outlook on life is beautifully represented and truly inspiring.This book gives the reader the feeling of knowing Einstein personally.
Rating:  Summary: I can not say enough good things about this book Review: A truly outstanding account of an exceptional individual. Einstein's way of thinking and outlook on life is beautifully represented and truly inspiring. This book gives the reader the feeling of knowing Einstein personally.
Rating:  Summary: Einstein Review: Any reader who thinks it might be profitable to spend some quality time with Albert Einstein - arguably the greatest scientist of all time - should read this book. The author, Denis Brian, knows how to write a biography and, in his `Alfred Einstein, A Life", he offers a wonderful subject. This reader - whose science background is close to nil - approached this book with considerable trepidation - needlessly. While the author deals properly and necessarily with Einstein's scientific pursuits and achievements - which means he sometimes employs some `heavy' jargon - like relativity theory, unified field theory, quantum mechanics, electromagnetism, superstring theory with 4 dimensions plus 6, photon theory, neutrons, protons, atoms, particles - negative and positive, etc. - he does so in a merciful fashion that places few demands on the reader. NOT to understand what Einstein was working on at any given moment was always pretty much the norm, anyhow, for even his peers and other world-class scientists. On the other hand, there is plenty in Einstein's life that nearly any reader can understand and probably relate to- much of which is highly fascinating and illuminating. Here is a list of some of the subjects and issues that Einstein chose or was compelled to deal with - apart from his science: women and romances and marriage, religion and the hereafter, career decisions, anti-Semitism and racism, parenting and a mentally ill son, celebrity-status and death threats, Israel and Zionism, Russia and Communism, Hitler and Fascism, Gandhi and pacifism vs. defense needs, capitalism, atomic energy and weapons, disarmament, Cold War politics, friends and relatives, Germany and Germans, Americans and their culture, world-wide lecture tours, mind vs. matter, Freud and psychoanalysis, J.B. Shaw and literary criticism and socialism, Upton Sinclair and social reform, and the Rosenburg spy case. In short, while Einstein was always focused primarily on science and the mysteries of the universe, he also found some time to do some serious thinking, talking and writing about other serious, mundane issues, as well. The author does a marvelous job of researching and organizing the materials in this book. I liked his decision to introduce each chapter with a title, the years covered therein, and Einstein's age during those years. I also liked his thoroughness in including first-hand accounts, letters, notes, and experiences of people of every possible age, class, and status. The traits and qualities they describe show clearly the essence of Albert Einstein: mental genius modest, shy, well-informed, explosive and lusty laugh, absent minded, casual, unkempt, outspoken, impulsive, punster, impudent, kind, enthusiastic, energetic, well-traveled, versatile, frugal, ebullient, stubborn, moody, lucid, liberal, unpretentious, warm-hearted, informal, passionate, workaholic, direct, absentminded, prematurely aged, pro-world government, tobacco addicted, endearing, self-assured, handsome and noble face, sweet smile, radiant and penetrating eyes, high brow, egalitarian, mischievous, sparse eater, `soft touch', metaphor lover, quick-witted, non-swimmer boater, non-driver, walking and hiking enthusiast. David Ben-Gurion, Israeli Prime Minister at the time, said this about Alfred Einstein: "He has the greatest mind of any living man...He's a scientist who needs no laboratory, no equipment, no tools of any kind. He just sits in an empty room with a pencil, a piece of paper, and his brain, thinking!" "Thinking" was Einstein's favorite sport. This book gets all the stars and `thumbs up' I can give it.
Rating:  Summary: Einstein Review: Any reader who thinks it might be profitable to spend some quality time with Albert Einstein - arguably the greatest scientist of all time - should read this book. The author, Denis Brian, knows how to write a biography and, in his 'Alfred Einstein, A Life", he offers a wonderful subject. This reader - whose science background is close to nil - approached this book with considerable trepidation - needlessly. While the author deals properly and necessarily with Einstein's scientific pursuits and achievements - which means he sometimes employs some 'heavy' jargon - like relativity theory, unified field theory, quantum mechanics, electromagnetism, superstring theory with 4 dimensions plus 6, photon theory, neutrons, protons, atoms, particles - negative and positive, etc. - he does so in a merciful fashion that places few demands on the reader. NOT to understand what Einstein was working on at any given moment was always pretty much the norm, anyhow, for even his peers and other world-class scientists. On the other hand, there is plenty in Einstein's life that nearly any reader can understand and probably relate to- much of which is highly fascinating and illuminating. Here is a list of some of the subjects and issues that Einstein chose or was compelled to deal with - apart from his science: women and romances and marriage, religion and the hereafter, career decisions, anti-Semitism and racism, parenting and a mentally ill son, celebrity-status and death threats, Israel and Zionism, Russia and Communism, Hitler and Fascism, Gandhi and pacifism vs. defense needs, capitalism, atomic energy and weapons, disarmament, Cold War politics, friends and relatives, Germany and Germans, Americans and their culture, world-wide lecture tours, mind vs. matter, Freud and psychoanalysis, J.B. Shaw and literary criticism and socialism, Upton Sinclair and social reform, and the Rosenburg spy case. In short, while Einstein was always focused primarily on science and the mysteries of the universe, he also found some time to do some serious thinking, talking and writing about other serious, mundane issues, as well. The author does a marvelous job of researching and organizing the materials in this book. I liked his decision to introduce each chapter with a title, the years covered therein, and Einstein's age during those years. I also liked his thoroughness in including first-hand accounts, letters, notes, and experiences of people of every possible age, class, and status. The traits and qualities they describe show clearly the essence of Albert Einstein: mental genius modest, shy, well-informed, explosive and lusty laugh, absent minded, casual, unkempt, outspoken, impulsive, punster, impudent, kind, enthusiastic, energetic, well-traveled, versatile, frugal, ebullient, stubborn, moody, lucid, liberal, unpretentious, warm-hearted, informal, passionate, workaholic, direct, absentminded, prematurely aged, pro-world government, tobacco addicted, endearing, self-assured, handsome and noble face, sweet smile, radiant and penetrating eyes, high brow, egalitarian, mischievous, sparse eater, 'soft touch', metaphor lover, quick-witted, non-swimmer boater, non-driver, walking and hiking enthusiast. David Ben-Gurion, Israeli Prime Minister at the time, said this about Alfred Einstein: "He has the greatest mind of any living man...He's a scientist who needs no laboratory, no equipment, no tools of any kind. He just sits in an empty room with a pencil, a piece of paper, and his brain, thinking!" "Thinking" was Einstein's favorite sport. This book gets all the stars and 'thumbs up' I can give it.
Rating:  Summary: Meet Albert Einstein - the greatest scientist of all time! Review: Any reader who thinks it might be profitable to spend some quality time with Albert Einstein - arguably the greatest scientist of all time - should read this book. The author, Denis Brian, knows how to write a biography and, in his 'Einstein, A Life", he offers a wonderful subject. This reader - whose science background is close to nil - approached this book with considerable trepidation -needlessly. While the author deals properly and necessarily with Einstein's scientific pursuits and achievements - which means he sometimes employs some `heavy' jargon - like relativity theory, unified field theory, quantum mechanics, electromagnetism, superstring theory with 4 dimensions plus 6, photon theory, neutrons, protons, atoms, particles - negative and positive, etc. - he does so in a merciful fashion that places few demands on the reader. NOT to understand what Einstein was working on at any given moment was always pretty much the norm,anyhow, for even his peers and other world-class scientists. On the other hand, there is plenty in Einstein's life that nearly any reader can understand and probably relate to- much of which is highly fascinating and illuminating. Here is a list of some of the subjects and issues that Einstein chose or was compelled to deal with - apart from his science: women and romances and marriage, religion and the hereafter, career decisions, anti-Semitism and racism, parenting and a mentally ill son, celebrity-status and death threats, Israel and Zionism, Russia and Communism, Hitler and Fascism, Gandhi and pacifism vs. defense needs, capitalism, atomic energy and weapons, disarmament, Cold War politics, friends and relatives, Germany and Germans, Americans and their culture, world-wide lecture tours, mind vs. matter, Freud and psychoanalysis, G.B. Shaw and literary criticism and socialism, Upton Sinclair and social reform, the Rosenberg spy case - and more. In short, while Einstein was always focused primarily on science and the mysteries of the universe, he also found some time to do some serious thinking, talking and writing about other serious, mundane issues, as well. The author does a marvelous job of researching and organizing the materials in this book. I liked his decision to introduce each chapter with a title, the years covered therein, and Einstein's age during those years. I also liked his thoroughness in including first-hand accounts, letters, notes, and experiences of people of every possible age, class, and status. The traits and qualities they describe show clearly the essence of Albert Einstein: mental genius, modest, shy, well-informed, explosive and lusty laugh, absent minded, casual, unkempt, outspoken, impulsive, punster, impudent, kind, enthusiastic, energetic, well-traveled, versatile, frugal, ebullient, stubborn, moody, lucid, liberal, unpretentious, warm-hearted, informal, passionate, workaholic, direct, absentminded, prematurely aged, pro-world government, tobacco addicted, endearing, self-assured, handsome and noble face, sweet smile, radiant and penetrating eyes, high brow, egalitarian, mischievous, sparse eater, `soft touch', metaphor lover, quick-witted, non-swimming boater, non-driver, walking and hiking enthusiast. David Ben-Gurion, Israeli Prime Minister at the time, said this about Alfred Einstein: "He has the greatest mind of any living man...He's a scientist who needs no laboratory, no equipment, no tools of any kind. He just sits in an empty room with a pencil, a piece of paper, and his brain, thinking!" "Thinking" was Einstein's favorite sport and his forte. This book gets all the stars and `thumbs up' I can give it.
Rating:  Summary: Meet Albert Einstein - the greatest scientist of all time! Review: Any reader who thinks it might be profitable to spend some quality time with Albert Einstein - arguably the greatest scientist of all time - should read this book. The author, Denis Brian, knows how to write a biography and, in his 'Einstein, A Life", he offers a wonderful subject. This reader - whose science background is close to nil - approached this book with considerable trepidation -needlessly. While the author deals properly and necessarily with Einstein's scientific pursuits and achievements - which means he sometimes employs some 'heavy' jargon - like relativity theory, unified field theory, quantum mechanics, electromagnetism, superstring theory with 4 dimensions plus 6, photon theory, neutrons, protons, atoms, particles - negative and positive, etc. - he does so in a merciful fashion that places few demands on the reader. NOT to understand what Einstein was working on at any given moment was always pretty much the norm,anyhow, for even his peers and other world-class scientists. On the other hand, there is plenty in Einstein's life that nearly any reader can understand and probably relate to- much of which is highly fascinating and illuminating. Here is a list of some of the subjects and issues that Einstein chose or was compelled to deal with - apart from his science: women and romances and marriage, religion and the hereafter, career decisions, anti-Semitism and racism, parenting and a mentally ill son, celebrity-status and death threats, Israel and Zionism, Russia and Communism, Hitler and Fascism, Gandhi and pacifism vs. defense needs, capitalism, atomic energy and weapons, disarmament, Cold War politics, friends and relatives, Germany and Germans, Americans and their culture, world-wide lecture tours, mind vs. matter, Freud and psychoanalysis, G.B. Shaw and literary criticism and socialism, Upton Sinclair and social reform, the Rosenberg spy case - and more. In short, while Einstein was always focused primarily on science and the mysteries of the universe, he also found some time to do some serious thinking, talking and writing about other serious, mundane issues, as well. The author does a marvelous job of researching and organizing the materials in this book. I liked his decision to introduce each chapter with a title, the years covered therein, and Einstein's age during those years. I also liked his thoroughness in including first-hand accounts, letters, notes, and experiences of people of every possible age, class, and status. The traits and qualities they describe show clearly the essence of Albert Einstein: mental genius, modest, shy, well-informed, explosive and lusty laugh, absent minded, casual, unkempt, outspoken, impulsive, punster, impudent, kind, enthusiastic, energetic, well-traveled, versatile, frugal, ebullient, stubborn, moody, lucid, liberal, unpretentious, warm-hearted, informal, passionate, workaholic, direct, absentminded, prematurely aged, pro-world government, tobacco addicted, endearing, self-assured, handsome and noble face, sweet smile, radiant and penetrating eyes, high brow, egalitarian, mischievous, sparse eater, 'soft touch', metaphor lover, quick-witted, non-swimming boater, non-driver, walking and hiking enthusiast. David Ben-Gurion, Israeli Prime Minister at the time, said this about Alfred Einstein: "He has the greatest mind of any living man...He's a scientist who needs no laboratory, no equipment, no tools of any kind. He just sits in an empty room with a pencil, a piece of paper, and his brain, thinking!" "Thinking" was Einstein's favorite sport and his forte. This book gets all the stars and 'thumbs up' I can give it.
Rating:  Summary: Einstein, the human. Review: As for many scientists, I'm sure, Einstein was my idol since I was 8 years old. Einstein is a universal icon of the genius representing the amazing power of human thought. However, his public image has always presented Einstein as an eccentric, super-human, distraught and insightful scientist who, with no more tools than a pencil and a piece of paper, and no more lab than his own mind, was capable of uncovering the inner parts of nature; to see what nobody else had seen before, and yet after he published it, the most remarkable scientists of his time needed many years to grasp it. This beautiful, excellent researched book presents a more earth-bound Einstein. A human that regardless of his fantastic scientific achievements, was also capable of making mistakes, both in his science and his own life. Here you will know the courageous pacifist, the activist, the scientist, and also the certainly nothing close to perfection husband and father. The true nature of Einstein can be tasted through these pages. A dream come true for any Einstein fan like myself, and an enjoyable reading for anyone.
Rating:  Summary: Detailed, but not tedious. Review: Author Brian does a commendable job in presenting a very detailed, yet not burdensomely tedious portrait of one the 20th century's most important physicist and one of history's most enduring cults of personality. Brian's book is extensively researched with copious notes, although it does buck the current biographical trend of oral history and personal interviews with eyewitnesses/friends/participants, of which there are only a handful throughout the book's 528 pages. The book's most important feature is Brian's effective blending of Einstein's public/professional/personal lives into a cohesive and comprehensive biography. A thorough and enjoyable biographical tome.
Rating:  Summary: Einstein in Detail Review: Based on recently released archival material about Einstein, this biogrpahy presents facts that make it clear that Einstein was all too human and reserved most of his passion in life for scientific investigation, while in personal relations he could slide into being aloof, or even callous. The biographical information is very detailed. This is one of the most thoroughly researched biographies I have ever come accross. Stylistically this may pose some challenge to the reader, because the book becomes very fact-laden and slow about a third way through. This is a conscientious and detailed examination of Einstein's life. You will probably find out more facts about Einstein from this biography than from any other.
Rating:  Summary: Well done biography Review: Brian writes an admirable biography on a fascinating man. The books is a bit short on discussing Einsteins thoughts or analysing what led him to his theories. But it gives much background on his private life, much of which was unknown until recently. A good read.
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