An odd book. Mitch mentioned the Princeton connection, which I hadn't noticed but which totally makes sense. It definitely has the air of a high quality vanity-press publication. I guess the guy who commissioned (sponsored? patronized?) it studied some math at Princeton as an undergrad, and retained his interest in mathematicians (particular Princeton ones, of which there are many). If I were rich this is definitely the kind of thing I'd do! So good job Princeton guy.
Anyway the reason I say the book is odd is, I enjoyed it, but it's just a bunch of pictures of mathematicians along with terse, sometimes interesting sometimes incomprehensible statements from each of them. The pix are ok but hardly any of the mathematicians seem to have dressed up for the occasion (or put any effort into looking cool). It makes sense, these are not fashionistas, but makes for boring pictures. (There are some exceptions of course. Tim Gowers looks so rad. He's like an elf or something)
I wouldn't necessarily recommend this book to anyone, but I enjoyed flipping through it. RIP Mandelbrot. I liked his statement. He aspired to take basic geometrical ideas and use them to radically reshape our understanding of the physical world, like Ptolemy's ellipses. His boyhood hero was Ptolemy. Seriously! I find that pretty funny as a thing to aspire to. Amazing that Mandelbrot actually succeeded in his dream. Every time I look at trees now, I think about their shape.