This book is a thoroughly enjoyable read because of the great balance between anecdotes, presentations of nice problems and algorithms and their solutions and proofs, hard mathematics, and musings on how to approach mathematical problems. After having read the book, most readers with a background in complexity theory will most likely be unable to resist immediately working on at least one of the many open problems presented in the book. (Till Tantau, Mathematical Reviews, October, 2015)
This book collects and edits the highlights from Liptons ongoing blog, rounded out by cross-references and a useful index and bibliography. the book offers a different experience and a framed portrait of the state of the art. Summing Up: Recommended. All levels/libraries. (D. V. Feldman, Choice, Vol. 48 (9), May, 2011)
The P=NP question is certainly one of the most important problems in mathematics and computer science (CS). What makes this book unique and delightful is that it gives proper weight to the question rather than the technicalities. Each chapter is based on one of Liptons blog posts, and readers can jump from chapter to chapter to find his beautifully written thoughts and insights. In fact, anyone who is highly motivated by this interesting subject that relates science with reality should read it. (Hector Zenil, ACM Computing Reviews, March, 2011)
This book collects some entries of the authors blog on Godels lost letter and P = NP . It is an enjoyable and lively introduction to some impressive achievements in the field of complexity theory. (Thierry Coquand, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1215, 2011)