We had a movie this year, a Christopher Nolan movie. It was different than his other ones. No jaw-dropping action scenes. No time travel tricks. Your mind stays sane through the film. Doesn't feel like Nolan, right? But it was. A movie that is one in a million.
The story, almost lost to humanity, was told by the best filmmaker on the planet. The story met its justice, and the movie became a hit. People went inside expecting a thrill but came outside with a deep sense of gloom and melancholy. What else would you feel when you go through that entire process? The process of making the deadliest weapon known to humanity- the nuclear bomb. How could you become so delighted after knowing what happened to the man who invented it and what he had to endure?
So, I decided to read the book that inspired the movie. I felt the book American Prometheus, compiled and written by Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin, would just be another boring biography that made vital points about the protagonist's life. However, this book turned out to be different.
The first thing that caught my attention was that this book was huge for a biography. I had an e-book, so I planned to read at least ten pages daily. However, my resolution soon went down the gutter as every page I read from this book took me inside a rabbit hole of videos and articles that would take me a couple of days to come out of.
The book offers a birds-eye view of the life of Julius Robert Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb and popularly called Oppie. Such a soft name for a person who invented a bomb. right? But, as you continue reading the book, you realize that Robert was softer at heart than the name 'Oppie.' We start with his birth, his parent's migration, their business, and how Oppie began developing an interest in geology and science.
Oppenheimer was a bright kid from his early childhood, and his intellect would surpass that of the scholars. The novel clearly outlines his emotional condition. Although Robert was a boy with high intellect, he was not entirely happy or satisfied with his childhood. There was an undertone of nihilistic cynicism throughout his life. He was reserved and looked like he lacked emotions. He had several monsters in his head, even though he seemed solid to the outside world.
The book details his education and college days in the States, England, and Germany. Several other stalwarts and their political ideologies are written in detail without taking you into the abyss of boredom. Things would never have carried any controversy, but what big something has happened without the involvement of dirty politics?
Oppie gets stuck in a whirlwind of the atomic project and the resulting politics. The book carries us through Oppie's personal and work life. Their juxtaposition is written with simple explanations, and his private affairs, family, and other events have been given literary justice. You wouldn't miss the layer of sadness and gloom that always followed Oppenheimer and his acquaintances wherever they went. Overall, it's a sad story. However great the glory, the grief you have to go through reading the book is not less.
The authors' efforts to compile millions of minute details and bring them together to tell a story are unparalleled. There has never been written a biography as good as this book. I feel the movie has successfully provided justice to the reader. While reading, it feels like you are walking with Oppenheimer along his journey through life.
The end is heartbreaking. If politics is involved, someone has to pay the price, and Oppenheimer has to pay the price here. The title feels perfect for the book and sums up how, just like Prometheus, who wanted to do something good for humankind, Oppenheimer was tortured and killed. You could feel several such similarities with Oppenheimer's life, too.
I read this book, listening along to an audiobook, which enhanced the experience multiplefold. This biography is a perfect work. I highly recommend you read this because history, true history, must never be forgotten.