A remarkable book. I read it in three days cover to cover. The writing is fluid and outstanding. It describes a young man's growth from the prep school level, through college, to the NFL, all the meanwhile enduring tumult and division scholastically, and being driven to solve mathematic puzzles concurrently.
As a reviewer I have a tripartite connection. From my life as someone who also played Div I athletics, studied the sciences with an advanced degree, and happened to have played chess in a tournament with John, I confirm his is a rare perspective as most anyone can imagine. I am glad he took the time with Louisa to set it down. They are both fine people. After we all meet briefly at the tournament I can say without doubt that John has an understanding of humility, introspection, poise, and analysis that is remarkably rare for the NFL culture. He played chess with someone literally 250 pounds lighter than he- a boy. John scrunched down to be less intimidating, and was gracious in his win. I will always appreciate that, thinking about him driving away in his Nissan Versa, telling me, "eh, some days are like that", encouraging even on my own loss, this giant guy bimbling back home to see his mother after some brainy games.
The fun thing about that small personal connection is that I read all the text in his voice, as if being spoken to. It was as Emily Dickinson speaking to Emily Saliers through the pages. The rigorous depth of the content is even there down to the quantum level. It was suprising. Now my undersanding of eigenvalues is greater, as well as the historical context of Schrodinger and Heisenberg as regards matrix algebra and commutation, and the turning of classical mechanics to the new atomic age. I was astonished to read a better interpretation of orbitals than my P-chem professor gave.
Very few people in life have such a drive for the truth that everything they write is reflected by underpinning logic more than a few levels deep. This book is like that, it's like reading Schopenhauer instead of Kant, or Spinoza instead of Sartre; informative, flowing, obviously packed with truth. Every sentence is unpretentious and worthwhile. By contrast I would read Whitman or Steinbeck with pain, hanging on to derive something new every 50 pages. But here, the thoughts and perspective are crystalline and precise. They have been made easy to grasp, as written from someone with teaching experience who puts the student or reader before the ego, and for that I am grateful for the breath of fresh air. Reading someone both gifted and powerful is refreshing because the author needs prove nothing, so the readers ego is spared any palliation of pomp.
But the reader need not be a mathemetician at all to appreciate this fine book, or even an athlete. It flows remarkably easy; faster than JK Rowling. I turned pages rapidly. If you would like to find a person that blends athleticism and intellect, someone who straddled two worlds at once, and integrated them together, intuition and logic, this is the place. If your life is strained and divided, take hope, he did it.
Thanks John. I hope to be ready the next time we might see each other, but you'll probably still be better in logic, poise, weightlifting, diligence, effort, and unflappability and a pile of other things. Still, you're heroic. Maybe I can scratch up something about bioengineering to fascinate you as a friend.
Cheers