The Penguin Podcast is back! Listen Now
The Genius Myth

The Genius Myth

Summary

Everything you think you know about genius is wrong.

Most discoveries don’t come in a flash of inspiration. Most high achievers aren’t obsessive loners with high IQs. Most ‘geniuses’ have collaborators and well-developed support networks. What is a genius? Very often, it’s the person who takes the credit.

Helen Lewis takes aim at the myth of the solitary genius, exploring historical and contemporary examples to show how a set of stories influence our idea of the word.

This mythology would not matter so much if it didn’t have a human cost. The Genius Myth lays bare the invisible support enjoyed by our most celebrated individuals: their collaborators, their teams, their wives and parents and family wealth and connection, all quietly tidied from the historical record.

By understanding the past and current models for genius, The Genius Myth works towards a possible future of a more egalitarian meritocracy.

About the author

Helen Lewis

Helen Lewis is a staff writer at the Atlantic, and a former deputy editor of the New Statesman. She has written for the Guardian, Sunday Times, New York Times and Vogue. She is a regular host of BBC Radio 4’s Week in Westminster, a regular panellist on the News Quiz and Saturday Review, and a paper reviewer on The Andrew Marr Show. She was the 2018/19 Women in the Humanities Honorary Writing Fellow at Oxford University. She tweets at @helenlewis
Learn More

Sign up to the Penguin Newsletter

For the latest books, recommendations, author interviews and more