<p>‘Winchester’s latest is a rollicking work of pop science that entertains and informs’ Publishers Weekly (starred review)</p>
<p>‘Winchester makes a convincing case … ‘Exactly’ succeeds resoundingly in making us think more deeply about the everyday objects we take for granted. It challenges us to reflect on our progress as humans and what has made it possible. It is interesting, informative, exciting and emotional, and for anyone with even some curiosity about what makes the machines of our world work as well as they do, it’s a real treat’ New York Times</p>
<p>‘Simon Winchester’s new book is a tale of many triumphs … His delight in words cannot be bridled, so that even “Exactly,” which is, after all, a nonfiction treatment of technology, brims with amusing and rare nouns such as bagatelle, bijoux, cynosure, seraglio and susurrus. These whir smoothly alongside the argot of the machine shop … Mr. Winchester covers more than 200 years of fine-tuning in this work, and corrals a large cast of eccentric individuals’ Wall Street Journal</p>
<p>‘An ingenious argument that the dazzling advances that produced the scientific revolution, the industrial revolution, and the revolutions that followed owe their success to a single engineering element: precision … An enthusiastic popular-science tour of technological marvels … readers will love the ride’ Kirkus</p>
<p>‘Another gem from one of the world’s justly celebrated historians specializing in unusual and always fascinating subjects and people’ Booklist (starred review)</p>
Bestselling author Simon Winchester writes a magnificent history of the pioneering engineers who developed precision machinery to allow us to see as far as the moon and as close as the Higgs boson.
Precision is the key to everything. It is an integral, unchallenged and essential component of our modern social, mercantile, scientific, mechanical and intellectual landscapes. The items we value in our daily lives – a camera, phone, computer, bicycle, car, a dishwasher perhaps – all sport components that fit together with precision and operate with near perfection. We also assume that the more precise a device the better it is. And yet whilst we live lives peppered and larded with precision, we are not, when we come to think about it, entirely sure what precision is, or what it means. How and when did it begin to build the modern world?
Simon Winchester seeks to answer these questions through stories of precision’s pioneers. Exactly takes us back to the origins of the Industrial Age, to Britain where he introduces the scientific minds that helped usher in modern production: John ‘Iron-Mad’ Wilkinson, Henry Maudslay, Joseph Bramah, Jesse Ramsden, and Joseph Whitworth. Thomas Jefferson exported their discoveries to the United States as manufacturing developed in the early twentieth century, with Britain’s Henry Royce developing the Rolls Royce and Henry Ford mass producing cars, Hattori’s Seiko and Leica lenses, to today’s cutting-edge developments from Europe, Asia and North America.
As he introduces the minds and methods that have changed the modern world, Winchester explores fundamental questions. Why is precision important? What are the different tools we use to measure it? Who has invented and perfected it? Has the pursuit of the ultra-precise in so many facets of human life blinded us to other things of equal value, such as an appreciation for the age-old traditions of craftsmanship, art, and high culture? Are we missing something that reflects the world as it is, rather than the world as we think we would wish it to be? And can the precise and the natural co-exist in society?
Bestselling author Simon Winchester writes a magnificent history of the pioneering engineers who developed precision machinery to allow us to see as far as the moon and as close as the Higgs boson.
• This is the perfect subject for an author whose previous narrative histories have sold in huge numbers: both ‘The Map that Changed the World’ and ‘The Surgeon of Crowthorne’ have sold over 100,000 copies (TCM).
• ‘Lives of the Engineers’ by Samuel Smiles was written in 1861. There is a huge opportunity to publish a book on this topic as no one has covered similar ground since then. Winchester sees this book as something that will spark conversation and argument.
• With recent debates around companies like Tesla, where workers have expressed dejection at difficult working conditions, this book will inform conversations around the world of automobile and AI as it chronicles the early days of industrialism and capitalism. Additionally, the stories of how seemingly mundane objects such as the watch, optical instruments, and the draught beer tap were first conceived opens up the scope of this book.
• Although this is a history book, the James Webb Space Telescope, which will be launched in late 2018, inspired this analysis of the early days of engineering. The book will be published ahead of this exciting NASA milestone, garnering attention from aerospace and astronomy enthusiasts and that of curious minded readers who want to know more about the inception of technology. Anyone with an interest in STEM will want to read this.
Competition: Inspired;Show Dog;How Innovation Works;Bad Science;Elon Musk;What If;The World According to Physics. Marty Cagan; Richard Fortey;William Dalrymple;Lewis Dartnell;Niall Ferguson;Dava Sobel;Mark Miodownik;Ben Goldacre;Madd Ridley;Ashlee Vance;Patricia Wiltshire;Randall Munroe;Bill Bryson;Stephen Hawking
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Simon Winchester grew up beside the Atlantic in South West England and studied geology at Oxford. He is the bestselling author of The Man Who Loved China, A Crack in the Edge of the World, Krakatoa, The Map That Changed the World, The Surgeon of Crowthorne (The Professor and the Madman), The Fracture Zone, Outposts and Korea, among many other titles. In 2006 he was awarded the OBE. He lives in western Massachusetts and New York City.