Great Projects
The Epic Story of the Building of America, from the Taming of the Mississippi to the Invention of the Internet
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
Since the earliest days of the republic, great engineering projects have shaped American landscapes and expressed American dreams. The ambition to build lies as close to the nation's heart as the belief in liberty. We live in a built civilization, connected one to another in an enormous web of technology. Yet we have all too often overlooked the role of engineers and builders in American history. With glorious photographs and epic narrative sweep, Great Projects at last gives their story the prominence it deserves.
Each of the eight projects featured in this masterful narrative was a milestone in its own right: the flood-control works of the lower Mississippi, Hoover Dam, Edison's lighting system, the spread of electricity across the nation, the great Croton Aqueduct, the bridges of New York City, Boston's revamped street system, known as the Big Dig, and the ever-evolving communica- tions network called the Internet. Each project arose from a heroic vision. Each encountered obstacles. Each reveals a tale of genius and perseverance.
James Tobin, winner of a National Book Critics Circle Award, explains the four essential tasks of the engineer: to protect people from the destructive force of water while harnessing it for the enormous good it can do; to provide people with electricity, the motive force of modern life; to make great cities habitable and vital; and to create the pathways that connect place to place and person to person. Tobin focuses on the indi- viduals behind our greatest structures of earth and concrete and steel: James Buchanan Eads, who walked on the floor of the Mississippi to learn the river's secrets; Arthur Powell Davis and Frank Crowe, who imagined a dam that could transform the West; Thomas Edison, who envisioned a new way to light the world; Samuel Insull, the organizational mastermind of the electrical revolution; the long-forgotten John Bloomfield Jervis, who assured New York's future with the gift of clean water; Othmar Ammann, the modest Swiss-American who fought his mentor to become the first engineer to bridge the lower Hudson River; Fred Salvucci, the antihighway rebel who transformed the face of Boston; and J.C.R. Licklider, the obscure scientist who first imagined the Internet. Here, too, are the workers who scorned hardship to turn the engineers' dreams into reality, deep underground and high in the sky, through cold and heat and danger. In Great Projects -- soon to be a major PBS television series by the Emmy Award-winning Great Projects Film Company -- we share their dreams and witness their struggles; we watch them create the modern world we walk through each day -- the "city upon a hill" that became our America.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"I hear America singing," wrote Walt Whitman in praise of our national identity, but surely what he heard must have been people singing while they worked to build this country. This engaging, profusely illustrated book is a companion volume to an upcoming multipart PBS documentary by Kenneth Mendal and Daniel B. Polin with the same title (set to air in February 2002), but it stands on its own merits as a well-written, entertaining historical and social record of how men and women tamed the elements and transformed the land on which they lived, mostly for the better. The book's thematic scope is ambitious and often encompasses discontinuous subject matter as it moves from the harnessing of water power on the Mississippi, Edison's discovery of electricity and how Samuel Insull democratized it for the masses in Chicago, to the construction of New York City's enormous waterworks and bridges, the evolution of Boston's ever-continuing "big dig" over several decades and the leap from material to virtual space with the Internet. Yet Tobin (winner of the National Book Critics Circle award for Ernie Pyle's War) brings it all together in a grand pattern that reveals how the seemingly impossible can move from a personal vision to a reality. While never losing sight of the larger scope of his project, Tobin has a sharp eye for salient detail and small but essential personal moments his account of how Insull's egalitarian vision reshaped Chicago's upper-class society and its opera house is worth a book in itself, while the dramas behind Boston's fight for more accessible roads is both remarkably told and moving. While it doesn't break new historical ground, this is an excellent overview of how America got to be what it is.