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Jan 20, 2012
Manifest Stefany
rated it
it was amazing
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review of another edition
Shelves:
biographies
Isaacson has done it again. Brought a larger than life personality, home. As a life long lover of Einstein, this book filled in a lot of the gaps about his early family life and the inquisitive child that became the brilliant man. The path to his most notable work was influenced by so many who also hold important places in history, good and bad. The rat pack of science, if you will. I found this book poignantly tender, demystifying at times and absolutely maddening regarding his personal dealing
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This is probably better than a 3-star book, but it turns out it was an abridgement. I do not willingly read abridged books. If the author took the time to write the book, and it is of interest to me, I want to read every. Single. Word.
There was more science explained in the book than I expected. I know that sounds like a duh!, but Einstein, himself, had ways to explain concepts in easy to understand language.
The abridging resulted in a seemingly short 76 years of Einstein's life.
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There was more science explained in the book than I expected. I know that sounds like a duh!, but Einstein, himself, had ways to explain concepts in easy to understand language.
The abridging resulted in a seemingly short 76 years of Einstein's life.
...more

Fascinating and lovingly crafted. Isaacson approaches his subject with the utmost regard and a clear desire to explain what we might call ambiguous or controversial aspects of Einstein's life. The book certainly doesn't lack in detail. There are 550 pages of narrative biography and a massive list of sources and notes from correspondence between Einstein and colleagues as well as family and friends as well as his notes and personal papers and archival material that must have been painstakingly re
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This was an excellent book! Rather long, but worth every minute. Aside from his accomplishments as a physicist, Einstein was a fabulous person. He was funny, mournful, and ever-dedicated to his work. He too fell into the same family dysfunctions as most us, and did his best to make the best of them. His visit and subsequent move to the US was so much because of what the US represented: freedom of speech especially, and a citizen-run government. I'm not a writer so I'm sure I'm bungling this up,
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I thought that I would skim this book and ended up becoming completely engrossed. I had no idea that Einstein had abandoned his first wife and child. Nice guy. I will admit that I tended to allow my ADD to takeover during the discussions of Einstein's theories, but all in all, an interesting book.
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Apr 04, 2011
Leo Horovitz
marked it as maybe-to-read

Feb 07, 2013
Rodney Ulyate
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
non-fiction,
world-war-i,
war,
politics,
biography,
germany,
nazism,
political-activism,
freedom-of-speech,
world-war-ii

May 26, 2015
Caroline
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
biography,
friend-recommendations