Ananyo Bhattacharya, who holds a PhD in biophysics from Imperial College London, has worked as a science correspondent at the Economist, an editor at Nature, and a medical researcher at the Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute in San Diego, California. He lives in London.
Rather like the books of Stephen Hawking or Carlo Rovelli...this one is rewarding on different levels. Everyone can grasp the significance of the puzzles posed, and if readers want to follow the genius through the steps of his solutions then Bhattacharya is a clear and authoritative guide. -- The Economist Non-Euclidean geometry, set theory, the prisoner's dilemma, Goedel's incompleteness theorems, self-replicating machines, game theory and nonlocality are among the astonishing range of topics that science journalist Ananyo Bhattacharya covers as he takes us on a whistle-stop tour through Von Neumann's restless mind...[A] splendid new biography. -- Manjit Kumar, Guardian Bhattacharya is a first-class science writer with an impeccable pedigree and he does the best job I have seen of explaining the significance of von Neumann's work across many different fields... A fine tribute to von Neumann's genius and his contributions to science. -- John Gribbin, Literary Review Bhattacharya tells the story tremendously well, situating von Neumann's work-in fields from quantum mechanics to game theory to cellular automata-as comfortably as I've ever seen it done. He's also good at deadpan humor. -- David Bodanis, Financial Times Sharp, expansive....A salient portrait of one of the most electrifying and productive scientists of the past century. -- Kirkus Reviews [An] agile, intelligent, intellectually enraptured account of Von Neumann's life. -- Simon Ings, Sunday Telegraph Any future intelligence capable of sending a representative back in time to help invent itself will be intelligent enough to conceal this from us. Ananyo Bhattacharya's The Man from the Future is therefore unable to confirm this suggestion, but much else about John von Neumann's presence in the twentieth century is revealed along the way. -- George Dyson, author of Turing's Cathedral Despite his central contributions to the theory of computation, economics, logic, complexity, and quantum physics, somehow John von Neumann never became a household name to rival Einstein and Feynman. Ananyo Bhattacharya's biography deserves to change that. Consistently clear and careful without sacrificing elegance or accessibility, it does full justice to this legendary figure of twentieth-century science. -- Phillip Ball, author of Beyond Weird An engaging and fascinating book that blends science and history. I loved it. -- Paul Davies, author of The Demon in the Machine This is a sparkling book, with an intoxicating mix of pen-portraits and grand historical narrative. Above all, it fizzes with a dizzying mix of deliciously vital ideas. The Man from the Future is a staggering achievement. -- Tim Harford, author of How to Make the World Add Up More than just a biography, The Man from the Future elucidates the breath-taking scientific progress in the mid-20th century, skillfully woven together in the story of one man, John von Neumann. -- Sabine Hossenfelder, author of Lost in Math A gripping tale of the most significant mathematical, scientific and geopolitical events of the early 20th century. Bhattacharya's storytelling seamlessly weaves together the science, the vibrant social and historical context, and the private idiosyncrasies of John von Neumann and the fascinating geniuses around him, without mythologizing. -- Andrew Steele, author of Ageless