Why did I love this book?
In 1945 J. Robert Oppenheimer was lionized as a brilliant scientist and a courageous American patriot, for his direction of the Manhattan Project. And yet, just a scant nine years later, he was a political and cultural pariah, stripped of his security clearance and subjected to a humiliating, public fall from grace.
This extraordinary transformation in his stature had little to do with Oppenheimer, who remained much the same person over the course of these nine years. What changed was the historical context, which could not have been more different in 1945 than it was in 1954.
This is a powerful, riveting, maddening story of America’s descent from the pragmatic, can do energy of the war years to the paranoia and vindictive excesses of the McCarthy era. It is also an extraordinary, deeply researched, piece of historical scholarship, that sheds important new light on one of the most shameful periods in American history.
12 authors picked American Prometheus as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
Physicist and polymath, 'father of the atom bomb' J. Robert Oppenheimer was the most famous scientist of his generation. Already a notable young physicist before WWII, during the race to split the atom, 'Oppie' galvanized an extraordinary team of international scientists while keeping the FBI at bay. As the man who more than any other inaugurated the atomic age, he became one of the iconic figures of the last century, the embodiment of his own observation that 'physicists have known sin'.
Years later, haunted by Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Oppenheimer became a staunch opponent of plans to develop the hydrogen bomb.…