Stephen Hawking was widely recognized as the world's best physicist
and even the most brilliant man alive-but what if his true talent was
self-promotion?
When Stephen Hawking died, he was widely recognized as the world's best
physicist, and even its smartest person.
He was neither.
In Hawking Hawking, science journalist Charles Seife explores how
Stephen Hawking came to be thought of as humanity's greatest genius.
Hawking spent his career grappling with deep questions in physics, but
his renown didn't rest on his science. He was a master of
self-promotion, hosting parties for time travelers, declaring victory
over problems he had not solved, and wooing billionaires. In a
wheelchair and physically dependent on a cadre of devotees, Hawking
still managed to captivate the people around him--and use them for his
own purposes.
A brilliant exposé and powerful biography, Hawking Hawking uncovers
the authentic Hawking buried underneath the fake. It is the story of a
man whose brilliance in physics was matched by his genius for building
his own myth.