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Rating:  Summary: Unusual suspects Review: Einstein was a troublemaker, the author informs us at the beginning of this book detailing, armed with the 1800 pages of files released by the FOIA, with Hoover's Albert-paranoia in action, aimed at the great scientist, especially in the years of the Red Scare, McCarthyism, and the Cold War. The public image of the greatest scientist of the twentieth century has been carefully manicured, but behind the teddy bear was a determined activist on many fronts, who fell afoul of not only the Nazis, but of the FBI. Einstein's valiant stands on social justice, racism, antisemitism, war, peace, and the Bomb barely enter public consciousness through the layers of the myth. The record of Hoover's manipulations and skullduggeries is almost pathetic in its pickiun character, next also to its bungling and misinformation. It is, for example, discouraging to watch how Einstein is deprived of security clearance, lest a man with such a reputation and global popularity be, we suspect the motive, able to influence or speak out from the inside on the use of the first atom bomb. The portrait left of the reactionary and racist Hoover at the head of a critical institution pursuing this biased and incomprehending agenda is nothing less than appalling. The portrait of Einstein's deep social concerns (read a triffle 'leftist') in action is the real man, please.
Rating:  Summary: More than a theory Review: The Einstein File by Fred Jerome, quickly dispels the poplar image of Albert Einstein as an absentminded, head-in-the-clouds-genius. Though Einstein is arguably the most widely covered, continuing science story in history and is most noted for his scientific theories that transformed our view of the universe. This book chronicles the life of an Einstein that the masses knew nothing about. An Einstein described as a troublemaker, an agitator, a fervent pacifist, a socialist, and an open critic of racism. Einstein arrived in the United States in 1933, the year of the Nazi's ascent to power in Germany, and became the focus of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI. And by any means necessary the FBI amassed a 'file cabinet' of information on him. Fred Jerome stumbled on documents that addressed Einstein as a Spy and a Kidnap Plotter. And a dossier where Jerome discovered the political dimension of Albert Einstein's life and his intense commitment to social justice. Jerome says when he realized how much had not been told to us about the life of the 'Man of the Century', he felt as though he had been robbed. This is not another biography of Einstein, some two hundred have already been written. It is a window opened by the FBI on the nature of Einstein's politics, the depth of his public involvement, and the generosity of his endorsements of organizations he supported. And it is this activism that made Hoover's Bureau consider Einstein dangerous. This book reveals information that makes one think the history we know is sanitized, and what we don't know is at times appalling. It talks of a 'list' maintained by the FBI on celebrities, political figures and anyone thought to have affiliatiions with the Communist Party. It underscores the dangers that can arise, and the rule of law that exists in times of obsession with national security. And it creates questions on where the line should be drawn on the issue of an invasion of privacy. This one will make you take a seat. Reviewed by aNN Brown
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