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The Prodigy: A Biography of William James Sidis, America's Greatest Child Prodigy [Hardcover]

Amy Wallace (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The son of a brilliant Russian-immigrant psychologist associated with William James, Sidis (18981944) was reading the N.Y. Times at 18 months, typewriting at three and entered Harvard at age 11. His phenomenal memory, powers of concentration and reasoning, and breadth of interests astounded his school teachers. According to Wallace, coauthor of The Book of Lists
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 297 pages
  • Publisher: Dutton Adult; 1st edition (June 26, 1986)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0525244042
  • ISBN-13: 978-0525244042
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 5.9 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #975,132 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and Heartbreaking, February 1, 2006
This review is from: The Prodigy: A Biography of William James Sidis, America's Greatest Child Prodigy (Hardcover)
I'm doing research on child prodigies for my newest book. The whole area of intellegence has always intrigued me, so this is painless research. More than that, this book, and the man it's about, William Sidis, is fascinating. And heartbreaking.

According to this book, William Sidis' IQ was estimated at 300. He was simply brilliant, going through gradeschool in three months and high school in 6 weeks. He took the entrance exam to Harvard at age nine and passed, but wasn't allowed entrance until age 11. And because of his gift he was hounded & ridiculed by the media from a young age until he basically went underground as an adult, hiding his genuis. It's very sad and will make you ashamed of what we sometimes do to one another. In this case, a great intellect and all his possible achievements were lost.

A fascinating, fascinating book.
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19 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars not the most meticulous bio, but good nonetheless, December 6, 1999
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This review is from: The Prodigy: A Biography of William James Sidis, America's Greatest Child Prodigy (Hardcover)
William James Sidis (1898-1944) was born to a psychologist with some unorthodox ideas about child rearing, attended Harvard at an absurdly young age, burned out at 14, and spent most of the rest of his life working menial jobs and living in poverty. Dubbed a ``failed prodigy'' by the popular press, he lived out his years as an eccentric and a recluse.

Wallace's book, the only biography of this most enigmatic of prodigies, gives us a balanced look at Sidis' up-bringing and a somewhat revisionist look at his later life. Sidis apparently was hard at work on manuscripts of various sorts even during his later years; this book is to my knowledge the only one that gives an account of that later work, which dealt with American Indians.

There is no better source of information on Sidis and his tortured life. This biography is not an authoritative academic biography, and it does not claim to be. Rather, it is a fascinating popular account of an amazing and dramatic life.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Prodigy - A Biography of William James Sidis., January 26, 2011
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This review is from: The Prodigy: A Biography of William James Sidis, America's Greatest Child Prodigy (Hardcover)
_The Prodigy_ (1986, E. P. Dutton) by Amy Wallace is a biography of one of America's greatest child prodigies William James Sidis. This book traces the life of Sidis from his earliest infancy in which his amazing intellectual powers were revealed to his experience at Harvard and eventually his decline and later life. William James Sidis (1898 - 1944) was an American child prodigy who early on revealed uncanny mathematical and linguistic abilities. Sidis was the son of Boris Sidis and Sarah Mandelbaum, two Russian Jewish immigrants. Sidis was to reveal uncanny abilities at an early age and the influence of his psychiatrist father Boris Sidis was to play an important role in his development. Sidis revealed uncanny abilities in mathematics, linguistics, and other areas at a very early age and was thus to achieve widespread notoriety as a child prodigy. Sidis attended Harvard University where he taught advanced math courses and was widely regarded as supremely intelligent. Later Sidis was to teach at Rice University but in later life was to drop out of the educational establishment. Sidis became involved in politics and was to become an influential libertarian, socialist, and pacifist. Sidis also was to write several prominent books and articles including theories regarding cosmology, the Second Law of Thermodynamics, and black holes, American Indian history, and an obscure work on the collection of street car transfers. While Sidis later life was to prove disappointing in terms of his early abilities, he remained a notorious figure and was frequently hounded by women and in the press. The life of Sidis raises issues concerning how prodigies are treated by mainstream society and the role of gifted education. The failure of Sidis asks important questions regarding the failure of many prodigies, although the author maintains that Sidis' life was not a failure by his own standards but rather it became necessary for him to "go underground". The author estimates the I.Q. of Sidis at between 250 and 300 based on his mathematical abilities.

The book includes the following chapters -

The Little Father - explains the early life of Boris Sidis, the father of William James Sidis, and a Ukrainian immigrant to America. Boris Sidis was to attend Harvard where he achieved notoriety in the fields of psychiatry and psychology and was influential in the circle around Josiah Royce, William James, and other famous thinkers. Sarah Mandelbaum was born in Russia and immigrated to America where she met Boris Sidis and was tutored by him. She was to go on to become a medical doctor, though she was never to use her M.D. degree. She became the mother of William James Sidis.

April Fool - describes the birth of William James "Billy" Sidis on April 1, 1898 noting his early uncanny genius and abilities. The author notes the early accomplishments of the infant Sidis in speaking and reading as well as his early education under his father psychiatrist Boris Sidis.

The Little Professor - explains Sidis schooling and his excellent performance in subjects such as mathematics, astronomy, languages, anatomy, map and calendar making, and grammar at the very early age of eight. Notes Sidis uncanny abilities in particular in mathematics and languages and his renown as a "little professor".

Sidis an Avatar? - explains Sidis attendance at Harvard University along with two other prodigies the mathematician Nobert Weiner and the statesman Adolf Berle. Notes the problematic relationships Sidis had at Harvard due to his young age. Explains Sidis astounding performance in a lecture he gave on four-dimensional mathematics. Compares Sidis to other prodigies such as Gauss and John Stuart Mill and notes their accomplishments.

Utopian Dreams - explains the fact that the press was to hound the child prodigy Sidis and when he became sick maintained that he had suffered a breakdown. This hounding of Sidis was to occur for the rest of his life. Considers Sidis' grades at Harvard as well as his early political writings concerning a utopia which he referred to as "Hesperia" and the role of the Constitution in Sidis' political theories. Notes the fact that Sidis was opposed to art and swore never to marry at an early age.

Portsmouth - considers Boris Sidis' researches into Abnormal Psychology and the Sidis Psychopathic Institute. Notes the role of the Sidis family in Portsmouth, New Hampshire as well as the relationship of the family to William James and other important Harvard professors and personalities.

The Perfect Life - explains the problematic relationship of Sidis to women and his vow never to marry. Notes some of the comments made by Sidis on Harvard's anti-Semitism, unconscious intelligence (his dabblings in his father's field of psychology), education, eugenics, and the family.

Rice - explains the experiences of Sidis at Rice and various proposals made there for marriage. Notes Sidis accomplishments but also his difficulties at Rice and notes his early involvement in radicalism and socialism.

Too Radical for the Radicals - explains how Sidis was ridiculed in the press and his relationships with women were brought to public attention; notes Sidis continuing involvement in radical politics at the time of the Russian Revolution. Notes the role of socialism in the political understanding of Sidis and his identification as a radical by the authorities.

May Day - explains Sidis' first job at MIT and his involvement in the May Day riots and his support for Russian radialism. Explains Sidis difficulties with the authorities, his atheism, and support for the Soviet system.

Rebellion, Romance, and Reversibility - explains Sidis' rebellion against his family, his romances, his involvement with radicalism and the American Communist Party, and his writings on cosmology. In particular, Sidis was to write on cosmology in his book _The Animate and the Inanimate_ (1925) which considers theories of the Big Bang and the "Great Collision", noted the role of the Second Law of Thermodynamics and "Fermi's paradox", and explained various issues surrounding black holes. This book was highly praised by Sidis' Harvard classmates Buckminster Fuller and Norbert Wiener.

In Search of Solitude - explains Sidis search for solitude from the prying eyes of the press explaining why he left academic life and his taking up as a clerk running a comptometer, his rebellion against his father, his relationship with Martha Foley, and relates his own experiences to those of another child prodigy John Stuart Mill.

The Peridromophile - explains how Sidis took up the eccentric hobby of collecting street car transfers ultimately writing an obscure book on the topic entitled _Notes on the Collection of Transfers_ (1926). Sidis was to form _The Peridromophile_, a magazine devoted to this hobby and further engaged in radical politics.

The Double Life - explains Sidis further dedication to this hobby and his double life as an operator of the comptometer. Sidis was to attempt to avoid the press who hounded him repeatedly because of his earlier life as a child prodigy.

The Tribes and the States - notes Sidis' involvement with the American Indians and his writings in _The Tribes and the States_ which attempted to discuss American prehistory. Here, Sidis tried to show the influence of the American Indians on the American Founders and their understanding of liberty (which differed from Sidis' earlier political musings about "Hesperia"). Sidis also was to comment on issues of equality, liberty, money, and democracy in these volumes and to support the American Indian involvement in early American history.

Friends and Relatives - notes the role of some of Sidis' friends and relatives and their discussion and relationships including discussion of the ideas in _The Animate and the Inanimate_. This also explains Sidis attempt to lead a quiet life at his job free from the press.

Invasion of Privacy - notes the role of the press in once again invading the privacy of Sidis when his life and job were revealed to the public and his life came under assault from the press who hounded him.

The Pacifist and the Transfer Wars - explains Sidis' support for pacifism during the Second World War and some of the conflicts that developed as a result of this pacifism and support for radical politics.

"America's Greatest Brain" - explains what happened to Sidis after Boris' death and his troubled relationship with Sarah his mother. Notes how new difficulties arose for Sidis in light of his pacifism during the First and Second World Wars which was considered radically un-American. Notes how the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover was to investigate Sidis' "Peridromophilists" and consider them a radical organization. Explains the reaction of Sidis' friends to the press and their attempts to set the record straight about Sidis.

A Superior Spirit - describes Sidis death and the reaction of his various friends and relatives and their support for his memory. Notes the role of "child prodigies" and "child geniuses" in the history of the United States and the reaction of individuals such as Norbert Wiener to that notion. Explains how the treatment of child prodigies and the gifted resulted in unhappiness for Sidis.

Epilogue - argues that William James Sidis did not burn out or decline as was argued but simply was forced to go underground (the author quotes Ayn Rand's novel _Atlas Shrugged_ to show how frequently the man of genius was forced to go underground in the light of a totalitarian society). The author argues that Sidis had an I.Q. estimated between 250 and 300 putting him easily amongst the world's highest I.Q.s ever recorded. The author considers some of the... Read more ›
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