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Review: The Genius In My Basement

A brilliant account of brilliance

January 27, 2012 10:51
Simon Norton offers a culinary concoction of an unusual appearance

By

Anne Garvey
,

Anne Garvey

2 min read

By Alexander Masters
Fourth Estate, £16.99

Alexander Masters' book is the most original biography I have read in a long time. It is relentlessly amusing, deeply complex, and far superior to its acclaimed precursor, Stuart, a Life Backwards. I am still delving into the pages, randomly selecting chuckle-worthy snatches of prose.

The material is, however, intensely serious. The subject, Masters's subterranean landlord, Simon Norton, was widely regarded as the mathematical genius of his generation. While still at Eton, he scooped up a record- breaking London University degree and three times won the Mathematics Olympiad, once with a 100-per-cent score, "one of the first boys in the world ever to achieve this mind-frazzling triumph," Masters comments appreciatively.

But Norton is not an easy subject. Especially after his observations on his brief appearance in Stuart.

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