It is a brave writer who tackles a biography of the world famous pioneer mathematician and physicist Sir Isaac Newton and James Gleick has acquitted himself superbly well in his new book
Isaac Newton. Accolades to Newton were piling up even during his early lifetime in the 17th century when such fame was usually confined to royalty, popes and archbishops and certainly not to ordinary mortals born in 1642 of yeomen stock in deepest rural England. According to Gleick, Newton was the first person whose attainment "lay in the realm of the mind" to have a state funeral and be buried in Westminster Abbey. A Latin inscription proclaimed his "strength of mind almost divine" with "mathematical principles peculiarly his own" and declared that "mortals rejoice that there has existed so great an ornament of the human race"--not bad for a farm boy from Lincolnshire.
Sensibly, Gleick, a well-known American science writer and author of the acclaimed Chaos, focuses a great deal on how such a transformation could happen to anyone with such humble beginnings at that time in British history. There is no doubt Newton's innate talent and genius but he was also lucky in that he had excellent schooling and through the intervention of a relative he was able to go to the University of Cambridge and went on to stay there most of his professional life. His mother supplied him with "a chamber pot; a notebook of 140 blank pages... a quart bottle and ink to fill it, candles for many long nights, and a lock for his desk". Try sending your child to university so equipped today.
Of course the critical achievements of Newton's life were in his scientific achievements and here is the real problem: how to explain them for the general reader when even academic mathematicians today find much of the detail of Newton's work hard to comprehend. This is largely because Newton did not have today's familiar technical language or standard units of measurement available to him; he really was exploring terra incognita and feeling his way. But this is exactly what Gleick manages to get over so well and there is so much more. Aside from it being an eminently accessible biography, illustrations, extensive notes, bibliography and index make this an invaluable source for anyone who wants to enter the wonderful and arcane world of Sir Isaac Newton. --Douglas Palmer
"The biography of choice. . . . Newton the man emerges from the shadows."--
The New York Times Book Review "Succinct, elegant. . . . A sharp, beautifully written introduction to the man." --
The Wall Street Journal "A masterpiece of brevity and concentration.
Isaac Newton sees its angular subject in the round, presenting him as scientist and magician, believer and heretic, monster and man. . . . It will surely stand as the definitive study for a very long time to come. Fortunate Newton!" --John Banville,
The Guardian "Gleick [is] a clever tour guide to the minds of great geniuses. . . .
Isaac Newton sheds new light on the difficult personality of a deeply enigmatic figure."
--Seattle Post-Intellignceer "Elegant, jewel-like...he does not waste a word... Gleick has given us the man and his mind in their full crazyness." --
The New York Times "A compelling page-turner. . . . Gleick [is] a clever tour guide to the minds of great geniuses.
Isaac Newton sheds new light on the difficult personality of a deeply enigmatic figure."
--Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"Beautifully flesh[es] out the alchemical dialectic, its balancing act between the spiritual and the gross." --
The Boston Globe
"An elegantly written, insightful work that brings Newton to life and does him justice. . . . Gleick proves to be not only a sound explicator of Newton's science but also a capable literary stylist, whose understated empathy with his subject lets us almost see through Newton's eyes." --
Los Angeles Times "The biography of choice for the interested layman. . . . [Gleick] makes this multifaceted life remarkably accessible."
--The New York Times Book Review "For the casual reader with a serious interest in Newton's life and work, I recommend Gleick's biography as an excellent place to start. It has three important virtues. It is accurate, it is readable, and it is short.... Gleick has gone back to the original notebooks and brought [Newton] to life." --Freeman Dyson,
The New York Review of Books "The best short life of science's most perplexing figure." --
New Scientist
"Written with enormous enthusiasm and verve and in a style that is often closer to poetry than prose. [Gleick] explains the fundamentals with clarity and grace. His ease with the science is the key to the book's delight." --
The Economist
"[Gleick is] one of the best science writers of our time. . . . He has exhumed from mountains of historical documents and letters a compelling portrait of a man who held the cards of his genius and near madness close to his chest. Gleick's book [is] hard to put down." --
Toronto Globe and Mail "Brilliant. . . . The great scientist is brought into sharp focus and made more accessible. Highly recommended." --
The Tucson Citizen
"Marvellously rich, elegant and poetic. . . . [Gleick's] great talent is the ability to unravel complex ideas without talking down. Books on Newton abound, but Gleick's fresh, intimate and beautifully composed account succeeds where many fail, in eloquently dramatizing the strange power of his subject's vision." --
The Times (London)
"Gleick . . . has transformed mainstream academic research into an exciting story. Gleick has done a marvelous job of recreating intellectual life in Britain around the end of the 17th century. He excels at translating esoteric discussions into clear, simple explanations that make sense to modern people." --
Science "James Gleick . . . makes the most of his extraordinary material, providing us with a deftly crafted vision of the great mathematician as a creator, and victim, of his age. . . . [
Isaac Newton] is a perfect antidote to the many vast, bloated scientific biographies that currently flood the market--and also acts a superb starting point for anyone interested in the life of one of the world's few, undisputed geniuses." --
The Observer "Gleick . . . brings to bear on Newton's life and thought the same clarity of understanding and expression that brought order to chaos in his first volume [
Chaos: Making a New Science]." --
The Daily Herald
"Moving . . . [Gleick's] biography is perhaps the most accessible to date. He is an elegant writer, brisk without being shallow, excellent on the essence of the work, and revealing in his account of Newton's dealings with the times." --
Financial Times "You can't get much more entertaining than Isaac Newton-as described by James Gleick, that is." --
The San Diego Union-Tribune
"Huge in scope and profound in depth. . . . The extent of Newton's genius is revealed in breathtaking detail. . . . A remarkable and challenging work and does full justice to its subject." --
Yorkshire Evening Post