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throwaway81523today at 5:57 AM4 repliesview on HN

That book is fiction with a factual veneer. I liked it a lot until I started realizing that many of the details were made up. Then I couldn't read any more. It was like when TwoSetViolin described what it was like for them to watch movies with musician characters played, unrealistically, by non-musician actors. You'd be watching the perfectly fine movie until you noticed that the bananas were blue instead of yellow, with nobody mentioning it. After that the movie made no sense any more.

I hated the movie Oppenheimer for the same reason.


Replies

ian_j_butlertoday at 6:25 AM

> That book is fiction with a factual veneer.

Definitely, but do check the link.. I dug it up originally by trying to track down detail about the nonfiction background that the book is pulling from. Seems like the best short source, but I'd love to hear recs for a good biography. The autobiography that Groth is careful to say is not an autobiography is on my shelf and also in pdf form. Haven't read it yet, but I'm not sure it's the type of thing that's going to cover the descent into madness properly.

https://web.ma.utexas.edu/users/slaoui/notes/recoltes_et_sem...

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thedailymailtoday at 7:43 AM

I read and enjoyed that book out of a general interest in the history of ideas, but admit I am not able to judge the underlying mathematics. Is the "fiction" part only related to descriptions of his mathematical contributions, or are there problems with the biographical information as well?

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helterskeltertoday at 6:44 AM

Interestingly, von Neumann's daughter was kind of shocked by the research the author did for the book The MANIAC; as a kid she carried graph paper in her pocket and Labatut had somehow found this out in his research and put it into the book, really blew her away I guess.

sreantoday at 2:48 PM

Very interested in reading your list of blue bananas in Oppenheimer.