This brand-new edition introduces the next generation to one of the twentieth century's most iconic and complex global figures.
J. Robert Oppenheimer was a brilliant physicist who led the American effort to build the atomic bomb during World War II, and who later found himself confronting the moral consequences of the revolutionary weapon he helped create.
Readers of all ages will witness the rise and fall of a scientific and historical icon in this masterful new edition. Exploring his childhood, his secret work on the bomb, his central role in the Cold War, and his tragic downfall, this quintessential biography is history at its finest, riveting and deeply informative, and now available to a younger audience.
MARTIN J. SHERWIN (1937-2021), distinguished historian and writer, was the author of A World Destroyed: Hiroshima and Its Legacies, which won the Stuart L. Bernath Prize, the American History Book Prize, and was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize. After twenty years of research, he joined with Kai Bird to complete the award-winning biography, American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer. His last book was Gambling with Armageddon: Nuclear Roulette from Hiroshima to the Cuban Missile Crisis. Sherwin served on the faculty of the University of California at Berkeley, Princeton University, the University of Pennsylvania and Dartmouth College. As the Walter S. Dickson Professor of English and American History at Tufts University for nearly 25 years, he founded the Nuclear Age History and Humanities Center there. In the last decade of his life, he was a University Professor at George Mason University and worked with the Wilson Center's History & Public Policy Program in Washington, DC, to develop the "Nuclear Boot Camp," a program to support young scholars of nuclear history.
ERIC S. SINGER is a high school and university educator, and historian of the Cold War in the United States. He served on the faculty of the University of Baltimore, where he taught about the Cold War's impact on ordinary Americans' lives, and other social, political, and structural forces that shaped American culture over four centuries. He previously adapted Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick's The Untold History of the United States. His work has been featured in Hamburg Institute for Social Research's Angst im Kalten Kreig (Fear in the Cold War), Urban History, The Nation, The Baltimore Sun, San Francisco Chronicle, Teen Vogue, and The Baltimore Banner. He lives outside Washington, D.C., with his wife, daughter, and dog, Umji.