In this book, the author writes freely and often humorously
about his life, beginning with his earliest childhood days. He
describes his survival of American bombing raids when he was a
teenager in Japan, his emergence as a researcher in a post-war
university system that was seriously deficient, and his life as a
mature mathematician in Princeton and in the international academic
community. Every page of this memoir contains personal observations
and striking stories. Such luminaries as Chevalley, Oppenheimer,
Siegel, and Weil figure prominently in its anecdotes.
Goro Shimura is Professor Emeritus of Mathematics at Princeton
University. In 1996, he received the Leroy P. Steele Prize for
Lifetime Achievement from the American Mathematical Society. He is
the author of Elementary Dirichlet Series and Modular Forms
(Springer 2007), Arithmeticity in the Theory of Automorphic Forms
(AMS 2000), and Introduction to the Arithmetic Theory of
Automorphic Functions (Princeton University Press 1971)."
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