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Review: Albert Einstein Speaking

Daniel Snowman enjoys a portrait of a versatile genius.

May 18, 2018 13:42
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2 min read

‘You oppose Zionism?” a colleague asks Albert Einstein soon after the end of the First World War.

“No,” is the reply. “As a human being, I’m an opponent of nationalism. But, as a Jew, I’m a supporter of the Jewish Zionist efforts… One can be internationally minded without renouncing interest in one’s tribal comrades.”

Much of R. J. Gadney’s engaging biography-as-novel consists of dialogue between Einstein and those close to him, as the great man struggles to accommodate the constantly shifting demands of both his professional and his private life.

The book opens with (and its title is taken from) his response to a phone call he receives in 1954 on his 75th birthday. It is from a girl of 17 who has apparently dialled a wrong number. No, Einstein insists, as he starts talking to her: “You have the right number.” And, over the remaining year of his life, a friendship develops between them.