I received an arc for this book from NetGalley.
This is a hard one for me to rate, because objectively it's not a bad comic at all, yet subjectively, I didn't enjoy reading it.
The art is fine, it's effective and works. The story is told by the people around Einstein, and they often break the 4th wall to give side comments to the readers. While this definitely can be humorous, it didn't work for me here. It feels very weird to read the "opinions" the people close to Einstein had about him. Because, while this book is definitely well researched opinions are subjective and so hard to know, especially when it's about actual historical figures.
I enjoyed the beginning of the comic, which was about Einstein's youth. The Einstein this book shows, portrays some symptoms of an autistic spectrum disorder, though it never diagnoses him. This is also only really the case in the earlier chapters.
But as Einstein grows up, he becomes more and more unlikable, at least in this book. He has no regard for the people around them and often treats them as his lesser, which was incredibly grating. And before you tell me "that's because of the autistic spectrum disorder, surely", no, it's not. While yes, people with an autism spectrum disorder can have trouble relating to people/ grasping social cues, they can almost always learn them, except when they have other comorbidities. And you can't tell me that our genius wasn't able to learn about society. He was able to but didn't want to. He didn't care enough to learn about that, and thus hurt the people around him. According to this book he never even met his daughter, and barely interacted with his son.
So, Einstein was incredibly frustrating to read about. He had plenty of affairs, so he must have been well-liked at the time, I just couldn't figure out why.
What I did like was how this book showed the impact of the two world wars on the scientific world. It was super interesting. The older Einstein became, the more he mellowed out, at the very least in this book. The final few chapters, like the first few, were a lot easier to read, because Einstein wasn't as ... rude.
There is, obviously, a lot of physics in this book. I feel like it's still very readable, even for people without a lot of knowledge in that department. This would be an amazing book for schools, and to use in science classes.
There was a scene where Einstein's wife talks about how "her woman brain isn't able to comprehend Einstein's theory" which I disliked heavily, because it was completely unnecessary. Most of his colleagues and other physicist at the time didn't understand him either, so it had nothing to do with her being a woman. And even if everyone else had understood it, it still had nothing to do with her being a woman. I don't know if this is an actual quote from her, because in a cursory search I couldn't find it, but if it's not, I feel like it's really wrong to put those words in her mouth, and in a book aimed at young students of science. I don't want young girls to read this and give up, thinking they won't be able to understand science.
All in all, this is a decent book about the life of Einstein. I wasn't that fond of the way the story is told, but it is well researched and full of information. It did not gloss over Einstein's (many) flaws, and gives a comprehensive insight into his life.
Yet it was incredibly frustrating to read, and I did not enjoy it all that much.