This is not the first time that James Watson has irritated his colleagues. After winning the Nobel Prize for co-discovering the structure of the DNA molecule, Watson penned his first scandalous book, THE DOUBLE HELIX, in which he candidly exposes the personality disputes and rancor underlying the great scientific breakthrough, disputes that just weren't brought up in normal scientific company. This present volume extends THE DOUBLE HELIX, covering the same years (1950s through early 1960s) but concentrating more on the intermingled personal lives of Watson and his colleagues, both in the U.K., and in the U.S., at Cal Tech, Harvard, and Cold Spring Harbor.
One of the most charming aspects of this memoir is Watson's close friendship with Russian physicist George Gamow. Gamow was not afraid to cross the usually-observed boundary lines of scientific disciplines, and soon was penning a torrent of letters to Watson, pressing him for details and raising possible contradictions. (Many of these letters are reproduced in facsimile in the book's Appendix). Watson and Gamow became founding members of the RNA Tie Club, and commissioned thirty ties with the double helix depicted upon them for the elite members of this fanciful secret society.
Other giants of science fill these pages as well. Watson presents intriguing portraits of Linus Pauling, Francis Crick, Richard Feynman, Ernst Mayr, Rosalind Franklin, and Walter Gilbert, among others. The reader gets a sense of the strong personalities involved at the forefront of scientific research, and of how their professional lives affected their personal lives.
But the most curious fact about this memoir is Watson's inclusion of
the details of his fumbling and almost pathetic attempts at seeking a worthy
companion of the opposite sex. Not only does this reinforce the notion
that many brilliant minds achieve their insight at the sacrifice of some
other part of their personality, but it also makes serious students of
history shudder. How many breakthroughs have gone unclaimed because
of the arrogance of these geniuses, because they are immature socially
and make
dubious personal choices that affected their research? For example,
one gets the sense that Watson left the high-powered laboratory world of
Cal Tech because the opportunities for meeting smart, sexy undergraduates
was far greater at Harvard. By raising fascinating side issues such
as these, Watson reminds us that scientific progress forges ahead in a
much more twisted and tortuous path than most hagiographers of science
would care to admit.
Dialogue on favorite books with Deane Rink before and during his latest trek to Antarctica, with a note from Bill Ransom and a digression about Frank Herbert (a.k.a Bookbabble 101) -- a very long and rapidly growing document:
Book reviews by Richard Seltzer
Published by B&R Samizdat Express, 33 Gould St., West Roxbury, MA 02132. 617-469-2269 seltzer@samizdat.com
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