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New book on Einstein is result of one man's fascination with physicist

His leather jacket, the boat with a Yiddish name — the publication offers a fascinating insight into the Nobel Prize winner

November 17, 2022 14:53
Einstein 08
6 min read

Gary Berger was working as a consultant surgeon in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, when he first began what became his lifelong fascination with the Nobel Prize-winning physicist Albert Einstein.

“I had heard about the theory of relativity, but didn’t really know what it was, and wanted to educate myself,” he says.

Initially — and this was 20 years ago — he started to collect photographs of Einstein: “I just wanted to get an idea of who Einstein was.” Then, with the encouragement of Michael DiRuggiero, owner of the Manhattan Rare Book Company in New York, Berger began acquiring documents relating to Einstein’s scientific life.

Eventually the collection swelled to near unmanageable proportions. Berger, realising he needed help in organising what he had bought, invited DiRuggerio to North Carolina. The two men spent days sorting through the Einstein material. It ultimately grew to what is believed to be the biggest collection of Einstein imagery in private hands.

Berger then decided he wanted others to enjoy the “Einsteiniana” — and so around four years ago he and DiRuggerio started work on a magnificent book.

It’s a justly hefty volume of 51 portrait photographs of Einstein, many signed and dated by the man himself, entitled Einstein: The Man and His Mind, with publication timed to coincide with the centenary of Einstein’s receipt of the Nobel Prize. The book also includes images of some of the original formulas and papers that rightly led to Einstein being regarded as the best-known scientist in the world.
The book is a treasure chest of unexpected Einstein facts. Here are 12 things we learn from it:

1. The very first image is an Einstein unfamiliar to most people: it’s the teenage Albert, aged just 17, and is thought to have been taken in 1896 to mark his graduation from school in Aarau, Switzerland.

He signed it and gave it to his close friend, another Albert, Albert Karr-Karusi. Berger and DiRuggiero liken the photograph handover to high-school students signing their yearbook.

Though we are not used to seeing Einstein as a teenager, his trademark shock of hair — sticking straight up as though he had been plugged into the mains — is clear to see.

2. Between 1910 and 1922, Albert Einstein was nominated 62 times for the Nobel Prize by his colleagues.

His win was finally announced on 9 November 1922 “for his services to Theoretical Physics, and especially for his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect.”