After having finally read through the whole text and completing almost all the problems, I finally feel myself ready to give my opinion on “Understanding Analysis”. Yet, far before the point of completion, as might be natural for such a long undertaking, I kept thinking of how best to summarize my experience with the book. A few phrases kept coming to mind, yet as I trudged along through the book’s contents, I found each to be inadequate in some way. “Understanding Analysis is a phenomenal book for all students of undergraduate level math”. A decent start but a bit too restrictive for my liking. Hell, I’m not even a math major myself and yet here I am, giving it my endorsement. “Understanding analysis is a fantastic read for anybody looking to learn math”. Better, but surprisingly enough, I came to decide that this too was still an overly narrow description.
Over the 8 months of my life which I spent grappling with this book; on morning commutes, between spare seconds at work, even somewhat ashamedly while scarfing down food during lunches, many a curious friend or acquaintance, with math backgrounds as variable as x, have asked what all the fuss is about. And time and time again, a conversation (at least if I had to guess) borne from some morbid curiousity about my self-masochistic form of leisure morphs into a sincere and genuine interest in whatever problem I have at hand, and often even becomes a genuine attempt to try to solve it themselves.
I’d love to say that these chats happen because I have such a captivating way of talking about math. But in truth, all the intrigue is I generate is a reflection of the book’s quality. Almost every analogy, counter-example, proof, or question I’d provide comes straight from the book because even the often paradoxical and unintuitive results of real analysis are conveyed with such simplicity and lucidity that practically anybody can understand it. After so many such conversations, I find it hard to dismiss all of them as just feigned interest or one-offs, which signaled to me that the book may be for more than just a math student or enthusiast. After much reflecting on these experiences, this lead me to the summary of the book I’ve settled on for this review:
“Understanding Analysis is the perfect book for anybody wanting to *think*”. Despite the book’s obvious use as a tool for learning real analysis, I’m sincerely of the belief that practically anybody can stand to benefit from reading it. This is far from just an endorsement of the benefits of learning math, but specifically the book’s unique approach to pedagogy which I have yet to see done so well elsewhere. Each chapter in the book consists of largely what one might expect from a math textbook – A motivating example, a set of assumptions made from that, and the proofs for theorems which follow, with some questions at the end of each subsection for good (Lebesgue) measure. This is hardly groundbreaking. What sets the textbook apart in my view is the final section of each chapter, which is structured as a long proof that you, the reader, must solve, with questions being integrated directly into the section’s contents, the results of which are further used to pose more questions until eventually the desired proof is finally done. This structure is ingenious, not just because it forces the reader to employ all the strategies from previous chapters since these proofs are often so involved, but also because it leaves you with a feeling that you are “discovering” the same math that the greats of real analysis, Cauchy, Euler, Weierstrass and so on did before you.
I truly feel as though I cannot give this book enough praise, and I honestly feel like I can credit it significantly for my plans to pursue a master’s in mathematics at some point in the future.