Audiobook19 hours
A Doubter's Almanac
Written by Ethan Canin
Narrated by David Aaron Baker
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
In this mesmerizing novel, Ethan Canin, the New York Times bestselling author of America America and other acclaimed works of fiction, explores the mysteries of a father, a son, and a family, as well as the nature of genius, jealousy, ambition, and love.
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Reviews for A Doubter's Almanac
Rating: 3.710784301960784 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
102 ratings15 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Doubter's Almanac is the story of Milo Andret, a mathematical genius. He seems to be able to visualize complex spaces. A loner as a boy wandering in the Michigan woods he carves a chain with no seams from a single piece of wood. Is it a forgone conclusion he would specialize in topology?
Although mathematics is the backdrop for the story and the chapter headings are obscure (and sometimes in Latin) the book is not about mathematics. It's about the problem of genius, it's effect on you and your family. We who are not genius are, perhaps, lucky.
Milo's mentor tells him, "Topology is God's language ... you've been called to translate it." It's odd to say this about a character such as Milo, but he is almost spiritual (or is it mania?) in his mathematical quest:
"God is subtle but not malicious . . . success in mathematics is in good part a question of wanting badly enough to look ... To look inside the mind. .. For that is where God has thrown the universe - sometimes inverted and upside down...like a pinhole camera. Seeing it all is secondary to the love of looking and the faith that it is not unknowable."
Later in the book, Milo's Jesuit doctor posits that Milo's problems are God's revenge against spies such as he.
A very different and compelling book! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5“Mathematicians tend to bloom early and die early.” — Charles Krauthammer, “Things That Matter”Milo Andret, the mathematical genius in Ethan Canin's novel “A Doubter's Almanac” (2016), lives too long, at least as far as he is concerned. Not only did his genius burn out years before, but he is haunted by the fear that his greatest work, for which he was awarded math's most coveted prize, may contain an error. Now he lacks the ability to find out for sure, and the doubt gradually destroys him.The lengthy novel covers virtually Milo's entire life, his rise, his fall and his family. His two children (especially his son) and his two grandchildren (especially his granddaughter) are also math wizards, a fact that petrifies their mothers. For genius does not make for an easy life.Milo's life is certainly not easy, although that is mostly his own fault. He succumbs early to the lure of strong drink and other men's wives. His genius makes him proud, so arrogant that his colleagues despise him. Before long he is booted off the Princeton faculty and is lucky to find a job teaching math at an obscure Ohio college.The second half of the novel is narrated by Milo's son, Hans, who uses his own genius to make millions on Wall Street, despite a serious drug addiction. Later, as his father's health declines, Hans goes to the Michigan cabin where Milo, like a hermit, has spent his last years. While nursing his father, he learns to love him.If the book's first half is difficult to read, the reader like Milo's colleagues finding him too obnoxious to bear, the second half (for those who stick with it that long) makes the early anguish worthwhile, for Canin gives us some beautiful and inspiring prose.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Plot started off intriguing, then became boring because of repetitive addictive behaviors, enabling, and domestic martyrdom and abuse.Mathematics was fascinating.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5THE DOUBTER’S ALMANAC is a good story, but the storytelling is dull.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5A story of a brilliant mathematician/topologist and his family. Milo is a brilliant mind, but he is haunted by his own demons. This book was 550 pages, and I think that was 300 pages too long.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a quiet, masterful novel about a brilliant man who peaks too soon. Milo Andret is a topologist who proves a long-unproven conjecture, and wins the coveted Fields Medal in mathematics. He gets a job in Princeton, marries and has two children, but his alcoholism and his general disregard for the needs and feelings of others constantly gets in his way. His son Hans is also a gifted mathematician, but uses his skills to make big money on Wall Street, and falls prey to addiction just as his father did. This all sounds grim; it isn't, really.I love Canin's writing style. His prose is spare, yet the work is still very emotional. The characterization of the male characters is superb; the women are a little sketchier, but better sketchy than false, I suppose. The plot has its share of interesting twists which I've avoided in my review, but the real story is about the nature of genius, the spirit of discovery, and how people know or don't know each other.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I thoroughly enjoyed the writing style and the plot, however the main character, Milo, was just the worst. The final chapter gave me the calm I needed after reading through the horrible things Milo put himself and his family through. My favorite character was Emmy, Hans' daughter, but Hans was a character that was more understandable and written more in depth about than Milo himself, which was funny since Milo was the "main" character.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Didn't come far with this one. I just do not buy the story, it feels artificial as if the author has researched the subject matter extensively without really being caught by it. The character of Milo does not come to life, the math descriptions clearly are from an outsider.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Do not love books about destructive people who are very clever. Always think someone should know better in a novel at least. like the math.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I felt like I wasn't smart enough to really appreciate this one. The dynamics of the different relationships was intriguing, but much of the subject matter seemed to be a little dense. I had a hard time keeping up and trying to understand the academia side.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Solid arc of life through fathers, lovers, and sons. Yes it is the same damn thing all over again, lucky you. The mathematician forever haunted by the weak spot in his greatest proof pretty much sums it all up.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5When I found out I was only halfway through this book with its unpleasant characters--and in the more time-consuming audiobook version, at that--I decided that life's too short for such limited literary joy, when I know more can be had elsewhere.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a great book and I'm glad I delved into this dense story of genius, addict mathematicians. Canin is worth the time. This goes on my short list of novels to reread when I am older and wiser.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A DOUBTER'S ALMANAC may well be Ethan Canin's magnum opus. It's certainly a 'big' book, at nearly 600 pages. The truth is, I am simply in awe of this guy's writing. I've read five of his seven books now, and they are all simply terrific. But this may be his best yet.It's a book about family, but mostly about fathers and sons. Milo Andret, a mathematics savant - a genius, perhaps - grew up an only child in the woods of northern Michigan. His parents pretty much left him to his own devices and he had few friend, so his childhood was solitary. He lived inside his own head. His mathematical skills got him to grad school in Berkley where he was championed by another recognized genius. He won the prestigious Fields medal and got an endowed chair at Princeton. But then alcoholism, his own strangeness, and lack of social skills cause it all to fall apart. After a stint at a backwater Ohio college, he ends up back in the Michigan woods. But the book is not just about Milo. It's equally about his family, and particularly his son, Hans (who narrates the story), who inherits his father's mathematical skills, but is plagued by his own addictions and phantoms. When I picked this book up, I hefted it and thought, this is gonna take me a week or two. Nope. I finished it in just three days. Because the characters in here are so real, so multi-dimensional, that I could not wait to see what they would do next. And yes, it's about fathers and sons. There was a particular line that stopped me cold. It was Hans remembering his father years later, and remarking on how incurious he was as a boy about his father. "That kind of curiosity - a curiosity about the man beyond the effects he had on my life - wouldn't arrive for years."I had to pause after reading this line, thinking of all the things I wish I had asked my own father about his life, things I wish I knew now, but never will. My father has been dead for more than twenty-five years now. Fortunately, Hans does get another chance to know his father better, and those scenes, near the end of the book, are some of the most emotionally charged of the whole story. In one of them, Milo admits, quite unapologetically, "For that matter, I wouldn't have said that you kids were a big part of my life ... That's just how it was in those days. I was working. That's what we did." Indeed, what I remember most about my father was how he was always worrying about how he could improve his business, make more money, better support his growing family. (I was one of six children.) He never had much time to spend with us kids. He "was working." That's what he did. I know these are just a couple lines out of a book nearly six hundred pages long, but they hit home. And there were plenty more passages like that all through the story that kept me turning those pages, identifying with and caring for these characters. Of course I was never a math genius, nor was anyone in my family, but that didn't matter. There is one climactic scene, a family crisis, in the chapter, "Thomson's Lamp," that caused me to gasp at its explosive and unexpected violence, as Hans and his sister both struggle to protect their mother from their father's sudden fury.And in yet another scene, unexpectedly tender, a drugged and dying Milo, in his suffering, breathes out this line, which Hans's wife recognizes is from a poem - "They do not ... tax their lives ... with forethought of grief." I found this to be a line from Wendell Berry's poem "The Peace of Wild Things." And it fits, because there is something wild about Milo Andret, this tortured and driven man who grew up nearly alone, in the woods behind his childhood home, and is trying to find his way back there. Here is the Berry poem in its entirety."When despair for the world grows in me and I wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be, I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. I come into the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief. I come into the presence of still water. And I feel above me the day-blind stars waiting with their light. For a time I rest in the grace of the world, and am free."Later, Hans says of his father, "I hope he went back to the woods. Back to the great leafy woods of his childhood, where he'd first known solace."A DOUBTER'S ALMANAC is a tome to read and re-read, to treasure. Yes, it's a 'big' book, but I was sad to see it end. It is a wise and wonderful book about genius, family and the frailty of human life. It will make you think, and it may make you weep. I loved it. My very highest recommendation.- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Once again I'm glad I did not give up on a book. Lot of mathematical theory goobly gook and a very complicated family dynamic story line. But it worked.