In Hungary, in the decades after 1900 and before World War II, existed an intense "math scene" in which young people, Jews mostly, spent long hours of excited energy arguing and devising proofs for mathematical problems.
They would meet at the city park in Budapest, many of them proteges of some of the great math teachers in the city at the time.
They competed with, and fed off, each other, much like the bebop musicians of Harlem did in the 1940s as they were revolutionizing jazz.
The city had a mathematical journal prodding this intensity by publishing problems every month, along with the best proofs of previous months' problems. It was apparently read by kids in Hungary the way American kids read comic books today.
All this was destroyed by WWII and then communism. But the numbers of titanic mathematical minds to emerge from Hungary during those years was probably unparalleled in the history of the world. They would change technology, industry and more with their work.
I don't know much about mathematics, but I'm fascinated by the people who do it at the highest levels. Paul Erdos was one of these.
This book is his life story, beginning with his years as a child prodigy growing up in the mathematical hotbed that was Budapest then.
As an adult, he literally had no home, but lived from a suitcase - which contained a few articles of clothing, and more articles about mathematics - a wandering Jew, obsessed with proofs, and living from the generosity of mathematicians with whom he stayed as he traveled the world for decades.
He wrote more than 1500 papers. This is the kind of book where what you takes from it, unless you're a mathematician, is not specifics, but a general feel, a vibe - in this case, about how great minds create.
Erdos was, according to Schechter, among the first to turn mathematics into a communal, and community, enterprise. To that point, most mathematicians labored in solitary confinement with their theorems. Most of Erdos's were, instead, collaborations with others.
I'm rereading this book, which I discovered and read in the late 1990s. It comes at a time when I'm about to publish a book of my own - this about America's addiction to painkillers and heroin, the exquisite expression of narcissism, isolation, individualism, and self-centeredness.
Therefore, I may be searching, more than usually, for cases in which community and collaboration create great things.