Prior to stumbling on this book while fooling on the internet, I had not heard of Fritz Haber. I have studied both biology and chemistry, but I had little appreciation of the crucial role nitrogen plays in life. In fact, it was only a year or so ago when I visited the birthplace of George Carver Washington that I did finally appreciate the importance of nitrogen. This despite the fact that I grew up surrounded by ammonia from a nearby plant! Education has been very inpractical for me. I continue to feel betrayed by the educational system that I went through.
Back to the book.
I enjoyed this biography. I found it very well written. I also learned a lot about the pre-WWI years in Europe, WWI and in principle, I learned a lot about Germany and the quest for national identity. As a fifth grader, the word nation was defined for me as a group of people who occupy the same territory, speak the same language, have the same traditions, and history. Not a definition that holds today, and hardly did it ever hold. Besides the historical points which were accompanied by commentaries/perspectives of living contemporaries, features which unfortuately are lacking in many history textbooks, the book to me shined with four more elements.
1. Success requires proper timing and luck, neither of which are predictable. However, one can increase his chances for striking at both if one is well connected. Networking, spreading your web of knowns is valuable now and has been valuable back then. In other words, it is an art, a skill that is important and should be taught. Just like Donald Trump's dad gave Donald a $1MM small loan and catapulted him into business, Fritz's dad introduced him to industry via his connections. Parents matter even if you do not particularly like them.
2. Success means sacrifice. Health, family, other. You cannot be all at all. And there is nothing wrong with refocusing on different areas of success at different points in time, as long as you have thought about the long term impact of the areas which you have chosen to sacrifice, so that one day these choices do not become regrets.
3. Even if you are successful you cannot control the macro world. You might strike it rich, deliberately or by luck, but the overall well being of the world will sooner or later catch up to you, and you may die poor and unknown.
4. People under/overexaggerate importance of events, people and things. My history class in high school left me believing that the greatest invention in WWI was the poinsonous gas. It was probably the tank. Interpreation of history is not history. History is set and done, a fact frozen in time. The interpretation, however, is not. It is vivid, and it is never right and never wrong. History should be digested with caution. History is a bit like pseudo science: a long-running, well-intentioned and accepted infomertial, but which is about as useless as the next weight-loss pill or cutting edge-weight-loss program. In another words, not a bad thing to know about it. Much better if you know who wrote what you are reading, and what that person's goal was-what they want you to believe and why.
I would gladly recommend this book to friends