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The MANIAC

4.5 out of 5 stars (2,622)

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Named One of the 10 Best Books of 2023 by The Washington Post and Publishers Weekly One of Barack Obama's Favorite Books of 2023• A National Bestseller • A New York Times Editor's Choice pick • Nominated for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction

“Captivating and unclassifiable, at once a historical novel and a philosophical foray . . . Labatut is a writer of thrilling originality.
The MANIAC is a work of dark, eerie and singular beauty.” —The Washington Post
 
“Darkly absorbing . . . A brooding, heady narrative that is addictively interesting.” —Wall Street Journal

From one of contemporary literature’s most exciting new voices, a haunting story centered on the Hungarian polymath John von Neumann, tracing the impact of his singular legacy on the dreams and nightmares of the twentieth century and the nascent age of AI


Benjamín Labatut’s
When We Cease to Understand the World electrified a global readership. A Booker Prize and National Book Award finalist, and one of the New York Times’ Ten Best Books of the Year, it explored the life and thought of a clutch of mathematicians and physicists who took science to strange and sometimes dangerous new realms. In The MANIAC, Labatut has created a tour de force on an even grander scale.

A prodigy whose gifts terrified the people around him, John von Neumann transformed every field he touched, inventing game theory and the first programable computer, and pioneering AI, digital life, and cellular automata. Through a chorus of family members, friends, colleagues, and rivals, Labatut shows us the evolution of a mind unmatched and of a body of work that has unmoored the world in its wake.

The MANIAC places von Neumann at the center of a literary triptych that begins with Paul Ehrenfest, an Austrian physicist and friend of Einstein, who fell into despair when he saw science and technology become tyrannical forces; it ends a hundred years later, in the showdown between the South Korean Go Master Lee Sedol and the AI program AlphaGo, an encounter embodying the central question of von Neumann's most ambitious unfinished project: the creation of a self-reproducing machine, an intelligence able to evolve beyond human understanding or control.

A work of beauty and fabulous momentum,
The MANIAC confronts us with the deepest questions we face as a species.
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From the Publisher

From Booker Prize and National Book Award finalist Benjamín Labatut: THE MANIAC

A contemporary writer of thrilling originality. The MANIAC is a work of dark, eerie, singular beauty

Darkly absorbing... A broody, heady narrative... says The Wall Street Journal

... something almost indescribably layered and complex, says San Francisco Chronicle

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Dizzying, unnerving, and packed with ideas about science and mathematics . . . Original and startling . . . Prismatic . . . Filigreed with lyricism. Labatut’s ‘fiction based on fact’ once again creates an artful sense of uncertainty . . . Labatut’s writing is magnificent and engrossing.” —The New York Times Book Review

“Wonderfully counterintuitive . . . You just throw up your hands and think,
Who cares what discourse label we assign this stuff? It’s great.” —Tom McCarthy, The New York Times Book Review

“Labatut’s latest virtuosic effort, at once a historical novel and a philosophical foray, is a thematic sequel, an exploration of what results when we take reason to even further extremes . . . A contemporary writer of thrilling originality . . .
The MANIAC is a work of dark, eerie and singular beauty.” —Becca Rothfeld, The Washington Post

“Darkly absorbing . . . A brooding, heady narrative that is addictively interesting . . . Certainly read this gripping, provocative novel.”Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal

“What [Labatut] brings to the page is something almost indescribably layered and complex that feels like a genre unto itself . . . Labatut has an uncanny ability to inhabit the psyche of these subjects—even though he’s conjuring up their recollections, they still come across as wholly reliable narrators. There is so much depth and profundity within their reminiscing, so much foreshadowing of the present moment when it seems AI is all we’re hearing about.” —
Allison Arieff, San Francisco Chronicle

“The novel’s final section, a thrilling human-versus-machine matchup, points to what von Neumann had wrought—and reflects the warnings of Labatut’s Wigner. Although its science never strays from what’s been reported in the real world and although Labatut honors the discipline of historical fiction,
The MANIAC qualifies as science fiction, at least as practiced by Mary Shelley and her adaptors. Neither Shelley nor Labatut includes in their work a scene of a scientist shouting, ‘It’s alive!’ as some cursed creation lumbers to life. But the warning of that moment powers The MANIAC as surely as electricity enlivened Frankenstein’s monster, a breakthrough who, in every telling, boasts the capacity to break us.” —Alan Scherstuhl, Scientific American

“Labatut’s dark vision of modern science, and the way he skillfully distorts von Neumann’s biography to communicate that darkness, will be familiar to readers of
When We Cease to Understand the World . . . In addition to explaining the basics of cellular automata, Labatut turns the idea into a symbol of von Neumann’s failure to respect the difference between the gamelike abstractions of mathematics and the messy seriousness of human life . . . Labatut imagines one Go official’s view on the matter, saying, ‘There’s no point in playing out the endgame if you know you’re going to lose, right?’ Today, when AI is on the cusp of making everyone from coders to truck drivers obsolete, that question feels more uncomfortably relevant than ever.” —Adam Kirsch, The Atlantic

“Utterly absorbing . . . The book drives at the amorality with which von Neumann and his brilliant cohort set humanity on an apocalyptic path . . . [A] terrifying sense of skirting the abyss.”
The Sunday Times

“His singular technique of chronicling scientific innovation via fictionalized narrative is superbly effective, drawing the reader through a tale of technological trepidation with all the nervous patience of a burning bomb fuse. It is as thrilling as it is troubling—one of those disquieting reads whose conflicts and questions churn in your mind long after you have finished reading.”
—Nautilus

“Labatut’s unique framing of John von Neumann’s brilliance and his descriptions of the transcendent power of computers and AI creates a disturbing, awe-inspiring, and inevitable vision, one foreseen by von Neumann, of an ominous future dominated by near infinite technological possibilities.”
Booklist (starred review)

The MANIAC arrives not a second too late to help us make sense of the burgeoning AI revolution . . . It’s a necessary book, a harrowing one, and it will change the way you look at the world around you.” LitHub

“Labatut’s book will provoke and inform, leaving us no more sure-footed in our nascent age of AI but certainly more aware.”
BookPage

“Labatut elegantly captures the sense of geniuses outstripping the typical boundaries of intellectual achievement and paying a price for it . . . Sharply written fiction ably capturing primitive emotions and boundary-breaking research.”
Kirkus

“After the slender yet incendiary
When We Cease to Understand the World, Labatut returns with a sensational epic of the Hungarian American physicist and computer scientist John von Neumann . . . Labatut mesmerizes in his accessible depictions of complex scientific material and in his inspired portraits of the innovators. In his previous book, Labatut grappled with the ways in which scientific breakthroughs offered new means of experiencing reality; this one succeeds at showing how acts of genius might break the world forever. Readers won’t be able to turn away.”—Publisher’s Weekly (starred review)

“Labatut has created his own genre: fictionalized accounts of great minds in the history of science, whose genius drives them to madness . . .
The MANIAC charts the sweep of modern computing, from its first inklings in punched cards used in jacquard textile looms, all the way to dramatic confrontations between artificial intelligence and acclaimed masters of chess and Go. Labatut’s prose is lucid and compelling, drawing readers on a frightening but fascinating journey; even the most right-brained among them will gain insight into the power and potential dangers of AI. Highly recommended.” —Library Journal (starred review)

UK PRAISE

“Brilliantly cerebral.”
Sunday Telegraph (five stars)

“[Labatut] is fast emerging as the most significant South American writer since Borges . . . There is no one writing like him anywhere in the world.”
—Telegraph

“Intoxicating . . . this marvel of a book, which inspires awe and dread in equal measure, is stalked by the greatest terrors of the 20th century, yet its final heart-stopping sentence makes clear the greatest terrors are yet to come.”
—Daily Mail

“A dark, strange novel by a rising literary star.”
—New Scientist

“Absorbing . . .
The MANIAC reads like physicist Carlo Rovelli crossed with the cosmic horror of HP Lovecraft.” —Chris Power, Sunday Times

“Monstrously good . . . Reads like a dark foundation myth about modern technology but told with the pace of a thriller.”
—Mark Haddon

“As addictive as a true crime tale.”
Mail on Sunday

”Both entertains and provokes . . . His infernal vision of science captures something of the unsettling vertigo of living right here in the Anthropocene after all.”
—TLS

“Labatut's voice comes from the future, to free us from the curse of our present.”
—Wolfram Eilenberger, author of Time of the Magicians

About the Author

Benjamín Labatut is a Chilean author born in the Netherlands in 1980. He was raised in The Hague before settling in Chile, where he lives and works. He is the author of Antarctica starts here (2009), a short story collection; After the Light (2016), a series of scientific, philosophical, and historical notes on the void; The Stone of Madness (2021), a diptych on madness, chaos, and modernity; and When We Cease to Understand the World (2021), a book that explores the ecstasy and agony of scientific breakthroughs and has been translated into over thirty languages.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Press
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 3, 2023
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ First Edition
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 368 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0593654471
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0593654477
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.4 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.15 x 1.2 x 9.3 inches
  • Best Sellers Rank: #31,165 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars (2,622)

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
2,622 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find this book fascinating and well-written, appreciating its biography of John von Neumann and its breathtaking examination of science. Moreover, the storytelling captures over a hundred years of dramatic history, and one customer notes how it explores the darkest corners of scientific exploration. However, the fictionality aspect receives mixed reactions, with some customers appreciating the scientific content while others question its authenticity. Additionally, customers have mixed opinions about the difficulty level, with some finding it not too technical.
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51 customers mention content, 47 positive, 4 negative
Customers find the book fascinating and entertaining, with one customer describing it as a mind-blowing novel about genius.
Fascinating and riveting story showing how humanity traveled from our life of feeling to our life of numbers....Read more
great book. fascinating stories. incredible minds. very well written. story about lee sedol too long. but highly recommend it.Read more
Read the second half of this book on AlphaGo. Stunning. Scary. And worth thinking about. There is something unexplainably powerful being built.Read more
...Wow! This is a mind-blowing novel about genius, AI, the future. and so very much more....Read more
24 customers mention informative, 22 positive, 2 negative
Customers find the book informative and well-researched, describing it as a biography inside a novel that provides a breathtaking examination of science, particularly focusing on von Neumann's life and work.
...It is reasonably written and informative and it tries (not very creatively) to link von Neumann's massive contributions in math and computer...Read more
The novel had some interesting stories and insights. It also was very slow at times....Read more
...and so very much more. Part biography, part horror, part tragedy, this is a scary and thought provoking look at a rare genius and a bleak warning...Read more
...The book was well written and actually very informative for me.Read more
17 customers mention writing style, 16 positive, 1 negative
Customers praise the writing style of the book, with one customer noting it is written as a collection of essays, while another describes it as a terrific "drawn from life" novel.
great book. fascinating stories. incredible minds. very well written. story about lee sedol too long. but highly recommend it.Read more
Labatut is a great writer, as evidenced in When We Cease to Understand the World, but Maniac does not have the same mystical energy and invention....Read more
...The book was well written and actually very informative for me.Read more
...Highly recommended book, creatively written and served a valuable purpose of entertaining the reader while informing us of what brilliance can...Read more
14 customers mention storytelling, 11 positive, 3 negative
Customers find the book's storytelling engaging, with one review noting how it captures over a hundred years of dramatic history, while others appreciate the human portrayal of John Von Neumann.
Fascinating and riveting story showing how humanity traveled from our life of feeling to our life of numbers....Read more
...Interesting structure and excellent storytelling. Highly recommend.Read more
The novel had some interesting stories and insights. It also was very slow at times....Read more
...Note: The first chapter is difficult. It deals with personal tragedy. Mental illness. Prepare yourself. The title is a double entendre.Read more
7 customers mention subject matter, 7 positive, 0 negative
Customers find the book's subject matter engaging, with one review highlighting its exploration of the darkest corners of scientific exploration, while another appreciates its uniquely dark mix of physics and philosophy.
...The subject matter is so fascinating, and the craft of the author is so impressive, and I derived such enjoyment from it, that I not only grew in my...Read more
...It’s a uniquely dark mix of physics and philosophy, and a story as much about people as the history. I’ll be reading anything this man writes.Read more
...The author has a positively genius for analysis of the perversity and creativity of the human mind. A delicious, engrossing read.Read more
...The AlphaGo section is fascinating but bears almost no connection to the meat of the book....Read more
11 customers mention fictionality, 7 positive, 4 negative
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's fictional elements, with some appreciating the realistic portrayal of scientific concepts, while others find it feels like non-fiction.
This book explores and explains the origins and science and possibilities of artificial intelligence better than any other I have read.Read more
This book is not a biography of John von Neumann. It is a work of fiction that cribs material from many sources without giving proper...Read more
...the World”, this is a breathtaking examination of Science, Mathematics, the very real people who advance our knowledge in these areas, and the moral...Read more
...The science is real. The locations are real. The majority of the events are real....Read more
5 customers mention difficulty level, 3 positive, 2 negative
Customers have mixed opinions about the difficulty level of the book, with some finding it not too technical, while one customer notes that the first chapter is particularly challenging.
...It's not overly technical so it's a really good read.Read more
...I hope it will for others. Note: The first chapter is difficult. It deals with personal tragedy. Mental illness....Read more
...This book carefully and skillfully combines actual events with imagined dialogue, etc....Read more
...weaker than its outstanding predecessor, which represents a very difficult act to follow....Read more
Stunning final 102 pages...
5 out of 5 stars
Stunning final 102 pages...
Only two books I have read in my long life have ever made me cry and shiver: the last 102 pages of this book and the final third of The Last Temptation of Christ. The craft and magic of the writing is stunning as are the events described. So very important. A MUST READ.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Fantastic book on Von Neumann and a peek into early AI
    Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2025
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    Strange but great book. The Maniac is a work of fiction though interwoven as a story about the life of Von Neumann and eventually a picture of the early development of theories of AI alongside a broader biographical look at the man. I am not sure what I was expecting from this when I bought it as it was more just popping up as a recommendation but I haven't read a book quite like this before. For a while I was unsure of whether what I was reading was actual testimony from people in Von Neumann's life but the author notes that the book is a work of fiction.

    The Maniac is primarily a biography of John Von Neumann, the Hungarian mathematician/polymath involved in the formalizing of quantum mechanics, game theory, an important participant in the Manhattan project, the designer of the modern computer architecture and early student of self-replicating structures. He was an extraordinary mind that the author describes through a series of fictitious interviews with people in his life. It is an effective buy mystic way to tell the story of his life but such a style was highly engaging. The author weaves in the "perspectives" of several renowned mathematicians and physicists as well as his former spouses. The book describes Von Neumann's astounding genius for being able to solve problems with an unparalleled focus, his breath of expertise coupled to a juvenile maturity on many other matters of day to day living. Among the characters detailed in the book one hears from both Feynman and Wigner (a school friend of Von Neumann who travelled to the US as well with him), Oscar Morgenstern (his game theory co-author). The author gives time to his two wive's perspective (not sure where he got all his sources), which highlight how Von Neumann was in many ways completely incompetent but also unbelievably brilliant, both had significant eccentricities themselves. The book morphs from a description of his unparalleled mathematical abilities to his lack of sympathy or empathy for the consequences for his work. In some sense the author implicitly makes the point the authors theory of zero-sum games comes out in his policy beliefs for things like dropping the bomb. Von Neumann was carried by his goals for finding solutions rather than taking a higher perspective on what he thought about the merit of the rules.

    The book moves on to computation and weaves in the modern story of Deep Mind and alpha go. It goes back and forth from the story of Von Neumann and how his interests shifted to the biological domain. I never read the Computer and the Brain, but I am assuming the author is weaving a story around this later part of Von Neumanns obsession once computing was getting off the ground. Obviously this field has made enormous leaps in the last decade due to neural networks and the scale of compute and so the author highlights how yet again Von Neumann was way ahead of his time. The story of alpha go and Lee Sedol through his experience is a nice conclusion to the book and one is left with a lot to think about and the new world we are now in where our computing solutions are paralleling tasks we thought solely in the domain for humans.

    Of course since this book has been published we have only gone further and though one comes to respect the brilliance of Von Neumann, one also hesitates on the idea that such minds should lead people given their lack of human perspective on what objectives serve humanity's interest. This issue is much at the forefront of AI today and in some regards this is the biggest takeaway from the book and the development of the H-bomb a rhyming example of a development that serves no benefit for any person, and yet was developed for its potential to increase power rather than welfare. Highly recommended book, creatively written and served a valuable purpose of entertaining the reader while informing us of what brilliance can deliver and what its blind spots can be.

    8 people found this helpful
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  • 4 out of 5 stars
    Very good, not great
    Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2023
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    When I saw that Benjamin Labatut had a new novel, I grabbed for it immediately. His previous effort was called “When we cease to understand the World” and i found it to be one of the best books I have read this century.

    “The MANIAC” is similar in that it is a fictionalized biography, mainly focused on John von Neumann’s life and career. The title is from the computer that von Neumann designed and had built that was housed at the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton shortly after World War II. It was one of the world’s first stored program computers, a notion that Von Neumann developed, perhaps inspired by Alan Turing’s original thesis where he fleshed out what is known as a Universal Turing Machine. Stored program computers are also known as being based on a Von Neumann architecture machines. They are, of course, mainly what the world uses today. A signature achievement from a man acknowledged as a mathematical genius by friends and colleagues, a genuine force of nature, a mathematician’s mathematician.

    Unfortunately, I am not sure Labatut does justice to the shape of Von Neumann’s extraordinary career in applying mathematics to a dazzling array of problems, from quantum mechanics, to Game theory, to the burgeoning science of computing. Despite the title, he also fails to dive very deep into the workings of the MANIAC itself, and the effort to program it, spearheaded by Von Neumann’s relatively unheralded 2nd wife Klara, who labored in his enormous shadow.

    In the final section of the book, Labatut tries to make a gigantic leap from von Neumann’s very original mathematical conceptualization of self-replicating machines to more recent advances in Machine Learning that underpin the effort of the Google Deep Mind research team to build a computer program called AlphaGo that successfully challenged the best human players of the ancient Chinese game of Go using Deep Neural networks and reinforcement learning. Tying Von Neumann’s work on self-replicating machines to ML using the neural network approach is a little weak IMHO, however. I see more of a direct line from Von Neumann first to the problem of cracking the genetic code, and from there eventually to the world of Artificial Life and some of the amazing folks associated with the Santa Fe Institute. On the other hand, the lineage of the neural network approach actually runs through McCullough and Pitts, and people like Hebb, that was then taken up again by the parallel distributed processing group at UCSD, following Minsky and Papert’s withering critique of the limited computing capabilities of perceptrons.

    In summary, this is an excellent and thought-provoking book. But it is a notch or two weaker than its outstanding predecessor, which represents a very difficult act to follow. I should also note that some of the primary sources Labatut cites in his Acknowledgment section are definitely worth pursuing if reading this novel scratches an itch. I am thinking of the George Dyson book, the AlphaGo documentary available on YouTube, the Von Neumann biography, etc.

    40 people found this helpful
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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Fabulous and masterful novel based on historical persons and events
    Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2025
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    I can't even describe how much I enjoyed this book. The wordsmithing of the author is so masterful that I read most of the book aloud. Reading aloud brought forward the characters of places and people. It slowed down my brain and defined the pace set by the words used by the author. Sometimes slow and thoughtful, sometimes fast, staccato, excited, angry or tense. I will read this book again, and probably out loud again, because it captures over a hundred years of dramatic history that many have forgotten but is vital to understanding where we are today.

    Before you begin, understand that it is a novel based on historic events and personalities. It is not a biography. My book club read this book and every member voted it a plus out of ten. A 100% ten plus vote is unusual. One person took the time to google every person mentioned and everyone of them is a historical figure in the world of physics, mathematics and chemistry. The science is real. The locations are real. The majority of the events are real. The author had access to tidbits of letters, news reels, diaries, biographies, textbooks and more. All of the "tidbits" and the history are masterfully woven into the intricate story of late 1800 mathematics, chemistry, and nuclear physics as it evolved up to current history. Without researching every page of the book it is nearly impossible to identify extrapolation from real events.

    Every advancement has a foundation, a core element of this book. The extrapolated narrative woven around the reality slowly revealed historical figures as people caught in a maelstrom over which they had little to no control and drove their craft forward faster than many imagined is could be.

    I won't spoil the ending. I kept wondering how the book would end and it ended with a historical game, that I already knew about (and currently a documentary on Netflix). It was the perfect way to morph one historical epoch into the beginning of another.

    Even if you are not a science or history buff, or like three of my book club members, mathematicians and physicists in your own right, this is a worthy read. For me the hallmark of any good book is that I will read it again and I want to know more of the history. This book did it for me. I hope it will for others.

    Note: The first chapter is difficult. It deals with personal tragedy. Mental illness. Prepare yourself.

    The title is a double entendre.

    5 people found this helpful
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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    We are on the edge of oblivion.
    Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2026
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    This book is informative, darkly entertaining, and prescient. The dawn of the digital age and the nuclear era are recent pointers toward the collapse of civilization as we have known it. Just look around. Of course, sentiments similar to this are not new. Humanity always seems to be on the edge. But this book packages the notion in a lively and novel way.

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Mainframe history. A fun read. Not too technical.
    Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2026
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    This is a fun book to read about the history of computers early on. The author is perhaps crazy. He's a lot of fun and the prose is excellent. Very entertaining. I would suggest it as a gift for someone who has interest in computers. It's not overly technical so it's a really good read.

    One person found this helpful
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  • 4 out of 5 stars
    Unusual style, but good
    Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2025
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    This writer's method, in which he mimics the different styles of other writers and/or commentators in successive chapters, was a bit off-putting to me. And when I read some magazine and newspaper reviews prior to purchase, they really didn't make it clear that this is more of a "mocumentary" rather than a biography of John van Neumann. Interesting nonetheless, and I'm glad to have read it and learn more about this fascinating and somewhat frightening scientist.

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Just Fantastic
    Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2026
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    This is one of the most fascinating books I have ever read. I can’t wait for Labatut’s next book.

    His “When we cease to Understand the World” was equally amazing.

    Learning and thinking and having fun!

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    framing AI so humans can grasp it
    Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2025
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    I thoroughly enjoyed The Maniac. It wove two stories into one. The very human story of John Von Neumann and his genius was pared with an explanation of how Von Neumann’s ideas breathed life into artificial intelligence. The author designed this book exceptionally well. It’s a biography inside a novel. Its construction was innovative and gripping. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. But more than anything, it explained two forms of genius. Human and computer based. It helped explain how the world will change because of artificial intelligence. Exciting and frightening all at once.

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Top reviews from other countries

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Best book ever read
    Reviewed in Canada on May 22, 2024
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    This new theme of fictional biography is too creative. Would definitely suggest to read if you like to read about scientific minds.

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    I'm completely appalled by this book
    Reviewed in Mexico on December 10, 2023
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    It's been a long time since a book brought me to tears. Labatut is one of the greatest storytellers out there. Check out his other 📚

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Amazing, moving, disturbing
    Reviewed in the Netherlands on May 29, 2026
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    One of the best books I have ever read

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    come da descrizione
    Reviewed in Italy on January 7, 2026
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    ben scritto, un po' difficile per fare esercizio di inglese

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  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Fascinant
    Reviewed in France on April 18, 2025
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    Superbe ouvrage qui nous conduit avec clarté et simplicité à travers le labyrinthe des découvertes et des génies humains, humanistes et a- humanistes, qui ont révélé des lois fondamentales de la physique et ont aussi mené à en faire un usage parfois positif et sauveur ET parfois terrifiant et meurtrier

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