Article

GETTING TO KNOW MAX PERUTZ

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Abstract

UNTIL I READ the new biography of Max Perutz—“Max Perutz and the Secret of Life,” by Georgina Ferry—I was like one of those people he described in a letter to a friend: “Many call me a famous scientist, but few know what I am supposed to be famous for.” I recognized Perutz’ name from “The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA,” by Nobel Laureate James D. Watson. Perutz was the head of the research group in which Watson and Francis Crick worked on the structure of the DNA molecule. I knew Perutz had won a Nobel Prize for something having to do with proteins, but nothing more specific. Having read Ferry’s book, I now know much more about him, although the book’s title may overstate the case about Perutz cracking the secret of life. Perutz handpicked his biographer. Just weeks before he died, Perutz called Ferry to his ...

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