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514 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 22, 2014
He had... written a best-selling book, smuggled himself into Germany, become an amateur spy, faced execution in solitary confinement, converted to socialism and escaped from a German detention camp. All this by the age of twenty-four. (438)
Geoffrey Pyke was bankrupt, he was being sued, his experimental school had closed, he was living in a nursing home and had been described as borderline insane. But he still had not reached rock bottom. During the winter of 1929, with the global economy entering meltdown, his wife left him. (153)
Military people... don't really plan at all. What they call planning is trying to adapt what there were taught in youth, with the minimum of alteration, to what they can see. That's why they see so little. (279)
Everyone who has ever worked in a complex pyramidical organization recognizes that there occasionally appears somewhere on the ladder of authority a dumb cluck who has to be circumvented if there is to be any progress whatever... He can throw any organization, civilian or military, into confusion. His breed should be exterminated for the good of society. (314)For another, the unusual nature of creative thought can remove the thinker from social interaction. Hemming saw Pyke's passions as backfiring:
Pyke's emotional fragility and heightened sensitivity to being sidelined appeared to make [working easily in a group] impossible. When he felt himself being marginalized he had a tendency to self-destruct, and would either cast around for a scapegoat or become difficult and behave, as one colleague put it, like an "awkward cuss." (378)Third, Pyke's habit of challenging all accepted ideas threatened those who held them, of course.