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109 East Palace
109 East Palace: Robert Oppenheimer and the Secret City of Los Alamos | Jennet Conant
6 posts | 5 read | 3 to read
They were told as little as possible. Their orders were to go to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and report for work at a classified Manhattan Project site, a location so covert it was known to them only by the mysterious address: 109 East Palace. There, behind a wrought-iron gate and narrow passageway just off the touristy old plaza, they were greeted by Dorothy McKibbin, an attractive widow who was the least likely person imaginable to run a front for a clandestine defense laboratory. They stepped across her threshold into a parallel universe--the desert hideaway where Robert Oppenheimer and a team of world-famous scientists raced to build the first atomic bomb before Germany and bring World War II to an end. Brilliant, handsome, extraordinarily charismatic, Oppenheimer based his unprecedented scientific enterprise in the high reaches of the Sangre de Cristo mountains, hoping that the land of enchantment would conceal and inspire their bold mission. Oppenheimer was as arrogant as he was inexperienced, and few believed the thirty-eight-year-old theoretical physicist would succeed. Jennet Conant captures all the exhilaration and drama of those perilous twenty-seven months at Los Alamos, a secret city cut off from the rest of society, ringed by barbed wire, where Oppenheimer and his young recruits lived as virtual prisoners of the U.S. government. With her dry humor and eye for detail, Conant chronicles the chaotic beginnings of Oppenheimer's by-the-seat-of-his-pants operation, where freshly minted secretaries and worldly scientists had to contend with living conditions straight out of pioneer days. Despite all the obstacles, Oppie managed to forge a vibrant community at Los Alamos through the sheer force of his personality. Dorothy, who fell for him at first sight, devoted herself to taking care of him and his crew and supported him through the terrifying preparations for the test explosion at Trinity and the harrowing aftermath of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Less than a decade later, Oppenheimer became the focus of suspicion during the McCarthy witch hunts. When he and James B. Conant, one of the top administrators of the Manhattan Project (and the author's grandfather), led the campaign against the hydrogen bomb, Oppenheimer's past left-wing sympathies were used against him, and he was found to be a security risk and stripped of his clearance. Though Dorothy tried to help clear his name, she saw the man she loved disgraced. In this riveting and deeply moving account, drawing on a wealth of research and interviews with close family and colleagues, Jennet Conant reveals an exceptionally gifted and enigmatic man who served his country at tremendous personal cost and whose singular achievement, and subsequent undoing, is at the root of our present nuclear predicament.
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KCofKaysville
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Pickpick

Great story of Oppenheimer and Los Alamos from viewpoint of Dorothy McKibben of Santa Fe who kept the secret. Last part was hardest to get through.

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KCofKaysville
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How Oppenheimer felt about New Mexico.

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KCofKaysville
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Started this one. Have not seen new movie yet but I will.

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Nebklvr
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Pickpick

My niece and I spent part of the weekend reading and rocking together. This book was a wonderful introduction to the building of a secret city of science for the express purpose of building the atomic bomb and ending WWII. A wonderful look at the many people who lived and worked at the site and of the determined woman who acted as the go-between for the scientists and the outside world. Dorothy McKibbin needs her own book!

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Nebklvr
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Some of the lighter material used to lighten a book on Los Alamos....

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Nebklvr
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Just starting this....also interested in good books on J Edgar Hoover and Joseph McCarthy. Any recs?

SaraBeagle For McCarthy- biographies by Oshinsky and Hermann will give you different perspectives 7y
Nebklvr @SaraBeagle Wonderful! Thank you! 7y
Nebklvr @SaraBeagle What was the name of Joseph McCarthy biography by Hermann? Can't seem to find it--only Oshinsky's. 7y
SaraBeagle @Nebklvr Joseph McCarthy: Reexaming the Life and Legacy of America's Most Hated Senator. 7y
Nebklvr @SaraBeagle Thank you kindly 7y
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