Joho the Blog
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June 18, 2005
The Man Who Loved Only Numbers was worth reading, but I felt used. Paul Erdos was a completely fascinating eccentric who proved that not all mathematical geniuses do their important work by the time they're 30. I won't go through his bundle of oddities because the author, Paul Hoffman, does a good job enumerating them through anecdotes. But don't expect a biography: Hoffman doesn't get much past anecdotes. That's not, however, why I felt used. First, the title is a lie. Hoffman makes it clear that Erdos loved his mother, loved little kids, and loved — in his own weird way — his friends, many of whom he kept for his lifetime. Second, this started out as a magazine article and it reads that way. It jumps around in the history of mathematics in order to pad out the book. Some of those jumps are interesting, but as a reader, I felt disrespected, as if Hoffman thought I wouldn't notice that he'd changed the topic without even the courtesy of a transition sentence. When in London I picked up a paperback of Blowfly, the not-quite-the-latest in the Scarpetta series by Patricia Cornwell. I'd pretty much given up on the series, but the book was on sale so I figured I'd give it one more shot. I'm about half way through it and that's probably as far as I'm going to get. The series started out well — a smart, feisty, female forensic pathologist who solved crimes the CSI way except without the techno beat. (The series undoubtedly was an inspiration, if that's the word, for the CSI sausage factory.) But as it's progressed, Scarpetta has gone from interesting to perfect. The people around her tell us that she is gorgeous, flawless, a genius, perfectly moral, the most caring person they've ever met. This would just be bad writing except I get the creepy feeling that Cornwall identifies completely with Scarpetta. That's in addition to a standard problem writers of crime stories now face: The Temptation of the Lambs. In the first half of Blowfly, Cornwall spends more time with her pair of serial killers than with Scarpetta. She apparently believes she is a fine observer of character. But, her serial killers are impossibly monstrous and monstrously over-written. It's embarrassingly melodramatic and creepy in all the wrong ways. O, Thomas Harris, what hast thou wrought? Posted
by D. Weinberger at June 18, 2005 08:48 AM
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Comments
In re Whine One --
Some of those jumps are interesting, but as a reader, I felt disrespected, as if Hoffman thought I wouldn't notice that he'd changed the topic without even the courtesy of a transition sentence.
(from the first chapter ...)
He sent out 1,500 letters a year, few of which dwelt on subjects other than mathematics. "I am in Australia," a typical letter began. "Tomorrow I leave for Hungary. Let k be the largest integer...."
Apparently less transition sentence is more math talk in the Erdos world. Sounds like Hoffman went native in the course of telling his story. Thanks for the tip.
Posted by: black dog barking | June 18, 2005 11:12 AM
In re Whine Two --
Let me recommend Ross (not John) Macdonald (best of breed), and Michael Connelly (a far more recent "find"). Here are the first three by the latter:
http://amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0316154970/
Here's a good place to start with Macdonald: The Underground Man
http://amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0679768084/
depending on airport book kiosks for this critical function will yield little better results than reading the Top 100 on Technorati. ;-)
Posted by: RB | June 18, 2005 01:23 PM
I recall reading that after the initial success of her novels, Patricia Cornwell decided to shed herself of the editor who had helped her through the earlier (and much more interesting) books in the series. (Sorry, I can't source this: it was several years ago in some magazine or another.) Fiction is probably one of those areas where mediation can be a very good thing.
Posted by: Mark Hamilton | June 18, 2005 03:36 PM
You have been reading, to the best of my knowledge, the lesser - more sensationalist - of the two well known Paul Erdos biographies. The good one is called "My brain is open" and I highly recommend it.
Most of the reviews I have seen from anyone with any Erdos knowledge or math skills seem to prefer "Brain" over "Loved".
Posted by: Claus | June 18, 2005 04:57 PM
Re Cornwall: Now in the fanfic world, her heroine would be called a Mary Sue and laughed into obscurity... :)
Posted by: Erica | June 21, 2005 12:58 AM