Logo
Lovejoy Surgicenter
ISSUE #33.24 • BOOKS • REVIEW
[WEB EXCLUSIVE]

Einstein: His Life and Universe


E = MC squared—sweaty feet and all.

Share: | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 0 comments
Recently in "WEB Exclusive"

July 15th, 2009
Merritt Paulson | As Portland Hosts the Triple-A All-Star Game, WW gets a scouting report on the future of baseball, soccer and other “crap” from the Beavers owner .44 comments

November 12th, 2008
Dangerous Women at In Other Words Saturday, Nov. 15. | Female stereotypes confirmed! Gypsy music to soundtrack.2 comments

July 2nd, 2008
Information Station | Tahni Holt's brainchild Information Studio was a remote-controlled icebreaker.1 comment

April 25th, 2007
Boomsday | Christopher Buckley advocates for the final Big Chill.1 comment

February 14th, 2007
Music Art Resource Collective Body Art Benefit | A music benefit celebrates bare vampire breasts—and painted human ones.0 comments

October 25th, 2006
Chasse Cop's History | Data from Portland Police shows one of the officers involved in James Chasse's death among the department's top users of force.34 comments

April 26th, 2006
"WE NO LONGER WANT TO KILL THE RESTAURANT" | Portland's hottest restaurant couple, Michael and Naomi Hebberoy, call it quits. So where does that leave their food empire, ripe?4 comments

April 26th, 2006
Linn Fallout | Multnomah County DA wants state to investigate charges made in WW story by ex-aide to Diane Linn.2 comments

April 12th, 2006
Other WW 'Cover-Ups' | WW comes clean about what else we've been hiding all these years.1 comment

April 5th, 2006
The Foxworth Files - Updated with Willamette Week's response. | Read the extraordinary sexual harassment complaint filed by a female subordinate against Portland's police chief.29 comments


BY HENRY STERN | hstern at wweek dot com

[April 25th, 2007] Here's a promising recipe for a riveting biography:

Pick a scientific genius who made the remarkable jump to world icon from his otherwise-impenetrable field. Choose a subject whose life was a bubbling stew of distinctive quirks, media attention (an unkempt mane never hurts), a penchant for philandering with women and a panoply of dealings with famous people in other fields.

And what do you get? Well, four years ago, author Walter Isaacson snatched Ben Franklin for that biography. Now Isaacson has pulled a similar set of ingredients together with another hefty tome, this time of arguably the most famous mind of them all—Albert Einstein. (For those of you keeping score at home, The Atlantic ranked Franklin last year as No. 6 on its list of the 100 most influential Americans, and placed Einstein at No. 32.) Einstein: His Life and Universe (Simon & Schuster, 675 pages, $32) delivers on the promise of being a good read. But it's really two books.

One book deals with Einstein's breakthrough achievements. You may not have to be Einstein to understand them. But it doesn't hurt either, despite Isaacson's game efforts to translate Einstein's concepts of relativity to readers who survived high-school physics by peeking over their neighbor's shoulder one desk over just to get a B minus (not that we know anybody who actually did that).














icon Story continues below

advertisement

advertisement

But more interesting, or at least accessible to folks other than physics geeks, is the other book. That book draws on Einstein's rich life intersecting with pacifism, Zionism, communism, fascism and every other -ism that roiled the first half of the 20th century

Isaacson is no slouch when it comes to the small details in Einstein's life. Who knew, for example, that Einstein "put aside his antimilitary sentiments" to seek service in the Swiss Army, only to be rebuffed in part because he had hyperidrosis ped, a.k.a. sweaty feet.

Or when it comes to Einstein's thoughts—larger than even his quest for a unified field theory. Asked whether he believed in God, Einstein told an interviewer, "I'm not an atheist. The problem is too vast for our limited minds. We are in the position of a little child entering a huge library filled with books in many languages. The child knows someone must have written those books. It does not know how. It does not understand the languages in which they are written. The child dimly suspects a mysterious order in the arrangement of the books but doesn't know what it is. That, it seems to me, is the attitude of even the most intelligent human being toward God."

It would at least be a good break for Einstein's hypothetical library patron if he stumbled on Isaacson's biography.

Walter Isaacson will read from Einstein at Powell's at Cedar Hills Crossing, 3415 SW Cedar Hills Blvd., at 7 pm Monday, April 30.

 

Rate This Story
3.33 average/3 votes

 
read all 0 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Einstein: His Life and Universe”

 
 
 





Ad

Ad

Ad

Sponsored Links: WW Personals
Musician's Market
Snowboard Jackets
Legal Tips
Camping Gear


Recently in Willamette Week
December 31st 1969Washington State | The Canada of Oregon has it all—a Stonehenge replica, a longboarder's concrete wet dream and dark, damp underground lava caves. Vive les rocks.
December 31st 1969Oregon's Outer Edges | Crater Lake. Hell's Canyon. Wallowa and Steens mountain ranges. Hell, yeah.
December 31st 1969Central Oregon/High Desert | No rain, plenty of snow, obsidian flows and great local beer. The folks from the real eastside know how to unbend outside.
December 31st 1969Great Cascades/Columbia Gorge | With plenty of room to roam—and hot springs for your weary feet—it's the place to ramble and relax for the weekend.
December 31st 1969Willamette Valley | Monks, tracks, tubing and wine make the fertile strip a virile place to play.
December 31st 1969Stumptown | Tons of public parks, an extinct volcano and nude beach volleyball to keep you jolly. Get out and collect those merit badges, without leaving the city.
December 31st 1969The Coast | The beaches are public. You own them. Go play—hike in the old-growth forests.
December 31st 1969Cycle Tour 101: Your on-bike guide to Highway 101 | To ride the greatest bike route in Oregon, you need to get out of Portland.
December 31st 1969Doggin' It | What happens when a Portland running club jogs with pooches from the pound?
December 31st 1969Over the Edge | Sam Drevo will paddle yr ass.