| ||||||||||||||||||
Product Details
Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
64 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Compelling,
By Theron Fairchild (theron@kyoto.email.ne.jp) (Kyoto, Japan) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Heisenberg's War: The Secret History of the German Bomb (Paperback)
The story of the German atomic bomb project has inspired controversy and invited investigation for over half a century. In his book, Thomas Powers has combined his experience as a writer with years of exhaustive research to form a fresh and in-depth interpretation of these events. Powers' focus is Werner Heisenberg, one of the world's foremost physicists in the 1920s and `30s, who elected to remain in Nazi Germany even after most of his colleagues had fled.Heisenberg, the most famous physicist in wartime Germany, was chosen to head Germany's nuclear research program. Yet, in his own version of events after the war, Heisenberg stated that there was never a danger of a German atomic bomb, despite fear in the U.S. at the time, because the German nuclear research program never focused on weapons and most of the project's scientists had no interest in making such a weapon for the National Socialists. Heisenberg's story, however, was treated with intense skepticism after the war by his friends and colleagues outside Germany, who forever saw Heisenberg as guilty by association. Powers, however, has challenged this accepted belief through intensive research into both new and old documents, and through a number of interviews with those who were in some way involved with the events. Powers conducts a thorough investigation and uses his expertise in writing about secret activities to expose the prejudices that have condemned Heisenberg. Powers addresses the issue from a different starting point and relies on the evidence to generate a new conclusion which ultimately exonerates Heisenberg from the guilt by association judgment. Powers' conclusions about Heisenberg and the German bomb may not satisfy everyone, especially since the subject has always been emotionally and politically charged, and the record incomplete. However, his book is intellectually stimulating because it addresses so many gray areas, not only in this particular subject but also in what constitutes accurate history. On the first note, Powers' reinterpretation of the events is compelling because he also simultaneously addresses how the condemnation of Heisenberg was created and perpetuated: by people who were most immediately traumatized by the Nazis, or somehow connected to the American bomb program. Secondly, Powers has treated the subject with about as much energy and time as any one person can, approaching the truth of the matter more closely than any other work to date. Yet, despite such considerable effort, the history is still incomplete and will likely remain so, which gives credence to the idea that history is only a representation of truth, and that hopefully all historians will approach history with as much hard work, honesty and objectivity as possible, setting aside their purposeful judgments in the pursuit of more accurate conclusions.
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
History Done Right,
By Alaturka (Northport, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Heisenberg's War: The Secret History Of The German Bomb (Paperback)
Here we see why Thomas Powers is a Pulitzer class writer. This is an excellent investigation of a very charged, complex but immensly interesting topic and the tragic life of maybe one of the brightest men in history of science. Powers takes us through the golden years of physics, birth of quantum mechanics, key figures surrounding this unique period, the international brotherhood and the total darkness and bitterness that shattered it in the wake of WWII. Having grown up in the aftermath of the Great War, Heisenberg, the smartest pupil of the "Great Dane", Niels Bohr, finds himself suddenly on the "other" side again in 1939. In spite of the fact that he never joins the Nazi party, an arrogance that he can afford due to his immmense popularity and fame, he was still considered to be a very dangerous tool of Hitler's ambitions by almost all of his old freinds. There was good reason to fear, for he had the means and the knowledge to put fission into the service of his country for peaceful and non-peaceful purposes. Worst of all, he had refused to jump ship and leave Germany, his country, at the beginning of hostilities. Powers goes into great detail of so called the German Atomic Bomb project, which turns out to be non-existent. Heisenberg cleverly plays the establishment to put war in the service of physics not the other way around as he puts it. Incredibly detailed and solid research Powers has done supports this view of Heisenberg's war activities. His detractors, old friends, many of them jews who have lost family in concentration camps, hold the view that Heisenberg was asked by Hitler to build a bomb but he simply did not know how to do it. The subject is very rich, full of giants of science and world history, characters small and large who cross from physics, math, chemistry, to military to politics and sometimes to very personal levels but all played out in a global theater. Thomas Powers shows that it is possible to write decent history even from a victor's point of view. It is worth noting the recent Broadway play by Michael Frayn, Copenhagen, which was motivated by this very book. The play is daring but still captures only a fraction of the real drama chronicled in the book. "Heisenberg's War" is well written. One gets a good feel of the time period. Very important Farm Hall records have been finally included which was missing from Cassidy's biography. It may have too much detail for casual reader but a gold mine for the interested. The irony of the men, who actually built the bombs and dropped them on non-combatant populations, refusing to shake hands with Heisenberg, who contributed absolutley nothing to the Nazi war effort, is just overwhelming. It is even more ironic that Heisenberg himself witnessed the total destruction of his homeland by the indiscriminant and incessant Allied carpet bombings. Imagine the fear his intelligence and understanding of nuclear physics caused on the Allied side at the time, when a quasi-attempt was made on his life while he lectured in neutral Switzerland. Like all greats, Heisenberg also had an ego to match his intellect. After a failed attempt or two, he removed himself from the position of having to "explain" himself and kept his silence, only deepening the mystery surrounding himself and the German "Bomb" project. "But the price of silence was steep. It buried by common consent the question all should have tried to answer: what should a man do when asked to build an atomic bomb?"
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
engrossing history,
By
This review is from: Heisenberg's War: The Secret History of the German Bomb (Hardcover)
Powers makes a compelling argument that one of the main reasons Germany failed to develop the atom bomb was because many German scientists --- especially the best ones --- just weren't very keen about the idea of Hitler having such a weapon. The account is painful, complex, and heavily documented. (By the way, it's hard to imagine how a feminist perspective would be relevant to this topic.)
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
|
|
|
Suggested Tags from Similar Products(What's this?)Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product).
|
|
This product's forum
Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
|
Related forums
|