Index Of The Man Who Knew Infinity Repack -
You don’t typically read a biography for its back matter. You read for the narrative sweep—the tragic prodigy, the Cambridge spires, the haunted eyes of Srinivasa Ramanujan. But when a book is as densely layered as Robert Kanigel’s The Man Who Knew Infinity (1991), the index becomes something more than an alphabetical chore. It becomes a hidden map of the book’s true soul.
Now search for . Go ahead. A reference to Ramanujan’s mother, Komalatammal. A mention of his wife, Janaki. And that’s almost it. The index doesn’t hide them; it simply has nothing more to list. In that silence, the index becomes a quiet indictment of the biography’s own blind spot.
And that, perhaps, is the real infinity: not the equations, but the spaces between the page numbers. Index Of The Man Who Knew Infinity REPACK
Notice the subhead under : “appreciation of Ramanujan’s genius,” “collaboration,” “ lectures on Ramanujan .” Yet Hardy gets something Ramanujan does not: an entire sub-section titled “personality of.” Kanigel’s index quietly confesses what the narrative itself wrestles with—this is a dual biography. The index lists Hardy almost as fully as it lists Ramanujan, because you cannot index one without indexing the other. The symmetry is subtle but damning: the white, Cambridge don gets a psychological profile; the Indian clerk gets a list of illnesses and notebooks.
Open to the final pages of any recent paperback edition (or the searchable “REPACK” of the digital text), and you’ll find a curious artifact: a ledger of obsessions. At first glance, it’s standard scholarly fare. sprawls across multiple lines, subheaded into: “childhood,” “illness,” “notebooks,” “taxicab number 1729.” Predictable. Comforting. You don’t typically read a biography for its back matter
Every good index ends on a quiet note. The last entry in my edition is , referencing Hardy’s famous rating of mathematical talent on a scale from 0 to 100—where Hardy gave himself a 25, Littlewood a 30, and Ramanujan a 100. It is the perfect closing note: the void from which all numbers spring, and the man who filled it.
So next time you pick up The Man Who Knew Infinity , skip the prologue. Turn to the index. Run your finger down the columns. What you’ll find is a second, smaller book—one of obsessive love, structural prejudice, and the silent geometry of who a biographer decides matters. It becomes a hidden map of the book’s true soul
If you’re working from a digital “REPACK” (a cleaned-up, reflowed ebook or searchable PDF), the index becomes even stranger. You can now hyperlink. You can see which names cluster. Try this: follow —he appears a dozen times, always as “colleague of Hardy,” “reviewed Ramanujan’s work.” He is a satellite. Then follow Narayana Iyer, R. —Ramanujan’s mentor in India. Fewer entries, but each one freighted with “encouraged,” “recognized,” “believed in.”