Great astrophysicists don鈥檛 think alike. Harvard鈥檚 Margaret Geller is getting to grips with Afghanistan鈥檚 crisis. She鈥檚 reading Jason Elliott鈥檚 鈥渟earing personal account鈥 of travels in Afghanistan during the Soviet occupation, An Unexpected Light (Picador, 2001). She鈥檚 also reading The New York Times writer Judith Miller鈥檚 鈥渢houghtful analysis of the Islamic fundamentalist movement鈥, God Has Ninety-Nine Names (Simon and Schuster, 1996). The book was a profound warning, says Geller, which went largely unheeded.
Geller, too, finds time for a lighter read: she鈥檚 enjoying Adam Gopnik鈥檚 memoir about his years with his wife and young son in the French capital. Paris to the Moon (Random House, 2000) 鈥済ives added dimension to a city I have visited many times鈥.
She indulges her fascination for maps 鈥渁nd everything about them鈥 with The Island of Lost Maps by Miles Harvey (Random House, 2000) about thefts of maps from rare books libraries.
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