Oppenheimer: Portrait of an EnigmaJ. Robert Oppenheimer was a puzzle to everyone. The nuclear physicist most responsible for the creation of the atomic bomb, he was a genius both scientifically and otherwise. His standards were impossibly high. He read widely in many languages, wrote poetry, and did superb science. Yet in Jeremy Bernstein's intensely interesting biographical memoir, Oppenheimer emerges as a man unsure of his identity and captive to an element of self-destructiveness in his makeup. Oppenheimer is the long-awaited book that many people feel Mr. Bernstein was almost born to write. As a former colleague of Oppenheimer's, he has composed a book that is both personal and historical, bringing the reader close to the life and workings of an extraordinary and controversial man. Oppenheimer once told the author that during the now-famous hearing in which he lost his security clearance one of the most spectacular attacks of the McCarthy era he felt it was happening to someone else. His lawyer at the hearing, after being with Oppenheimer day in and day out for several months, said he did not know him in any real sense at all. Yet everyone in the scientific community and in government agreed that without Oppenheimer's totally remarkable leadership at Los Alamos, the atomic bomb would not have happened, and the Second World War would have ended very differently. Filled with revealing insights and details that set the historical record straight, Oppenheimer is that rare quantity: a vastly entertaining study of one of the most important and enigmatic scientists of the atomic age. Illustrated with black-and-white photographs." |
What people are saying - Write a review
Oppenheimer: portrait of an enigma
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictThis is not the most comprehensive biography of J. Robert Oppenheimer (1904-67), but Bernstein (Einstein) doesn't intend it as such. Instead, it is a personal account of the time that the author spent ... Read full review
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alamos asked atomic bomb became began Berkeley Bethe Bohr born Bridgman California called Chevalier clear clearance committee Communist deuteron Dirac Dyson Edward Teller Edwin McMillan Einstein electrons Eltenton Ernest Lawrence Ethical Culture explosion felt fission bomb Franck Report Frank Oppenheimer Garrison Groves happened Harvard hearing heimer Hoover hydrogen bomb idea Institute interested interview isotope Jean Tatlock Julius Robert Oppenheimer Kitty knew laboratory later Lawrence lecture letter Lilienthal mass matter Melba Phillips neutron stars never Nobel Prize nuclear weapons nucleus Oppen Oppenheimer's party Pash Pauli penheimer physicist physics plutonium president Princeton professor quantum mechanics question Rabi reaction reactor Robb Robert Oppenheimer Russians Schwinger scientists seemed Serber Smith someone Soviet Strauss super talk testimony theory things thought tion told Tolman took Truman Ulam Ulam-Teller University uranium wanted writes wrote York