First edition cover | |
| Author | Joseph Schwartz |
|---|---|
| Illustrator | Michael McGuinness |
| Language | English |
| Series | For Beginners Introducing... |
| Subjects | Albert Einstein Relativity |
| Publisher | Writers & Readers Pantheon Books Icon Books |
| Publication place | United Kingdom |
| Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Einstein for Beginners, republished asIntroducing Einstein, is a 1979graphicstudy guide toAlbert Einstein and thetheory of relativity written by Joseph Schwartz and illustrated by Michael McGuinness.
Leonardo reviewer Nan Conklin stated that the work is "not simply a book explaining Einstein's scientific work, but a mixture of history, politics and science."[1] According toScience for the People reviewerPaul Thagard, "Einstein's work is related," in this book, "to the rise ofelectrical industries and the later development of theatomic bomb."[2]
This volume was originally published in theUnited Kingdom byWriters and Readers Publishing Cooperative in 1979. It was republished in the US byPantheon Books and in the UK byIcon Books.
Paul Thagard, writing inScience for the People, describes the book as "intelligible and entertaining,"[2] while Henry McDonald, writing inThe Washington Post, describes it as "well illustrated and thoroughly researched."[3]
"Almost half the book," according to Nan Conklin, writing inLeonardo, "is devoted to recounting Einstein's early life and the influences on him."[1] "Its discussion of the political environment in which Einstein's discoveries were made is," according to McDonald, "informative."[3]
"The drawing and the words have a distinctly comic-book flavor," according to Conklin, but it is "only when the authors set out to explain Einstein's theories that the use of the peculiar mode of presentation seems justified."[1] McDonald says that "the presentation of the discoveries themselves is little short of inspired,"[3] while Thagard too commends the authors as "highly inventive in using amusing illustrations and humorous asides to lead the beginners through difficult concepts."[2]
While Conklin speculates that the publishers may have included a volume on Einstein in this series due to his belief in "the establishment of a socialist economy, accompanied by an educational system which would be oriented toward social goals,"[1] and McDonald confirms that the authors "go out of their way to emphasize [...] Einstein's socialism," Thagard is critical of the failure to "develop the social connections in a substantial way," and concludes that the volume does not provide a "basis for discussion of the role of science in society."[2]