To his colleagues, Richard Feynman was not so much a genius as he was a full-blown magician: someone who ‘does things that nobody else could do and that seem completely unexpected.’ The path he cleared for twentieth-century physics led from the making of the atomic bomb to a Nobel Prize-winning theory of quantam electrodynamics to his devastating expos of the Challenger space shuttle disaster. At the same time, the ebullient Feynman established a reputation as an eccentric showman, a master safe cracker and bongo player, and a wizard of seduction.
Now James Gleick, author of the bestselling Chaos, unravels teh dense skein of Feynman’s thought as well as the paradoxes of his character in a biography–which was nominated for a National Book Award–of outstanding lucidity and compassion.