StillILearn
New Member
I understand he's working on a new book about the San Francisco earthquake/fire.
Has anybody here read any of his books?
Has anybody here read any of his books?
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funes said:I did find, and read, Winchester's Krakatoa. It was a rather strange experience. Somehow, he managed to write a 400 page book about one of the biggest natural disasters in history in such a way that the actual eruption was anti-climactic. There was a great deal of repetition. The end result was that the book seemed more like a series of lectures bound together and not edited.
All in all, a very mediocre book.
Ronny said:I read and liked the Professor and the Madman, I thought it was a very good look at what it took to put the dictionary together. I had never once even thought of how much work that had to of taken. The personal stories of the creators made it all the more interesting.
funes said:Somehow, he managed to write a 400 page book about one of the biggest natural disasters in history in such a way that the actual eruption was anti-climactic.
StillILearn said:Here's a link, Ronny, that will give you a peek at some of the other subjects he's tackled. The Professor and the Madman was the first book I read by Winchester, too, and from now on I'll always feel a special affection for the the good old OED.
As a lifelong Californian, I can't wait to see what he does for the San Francisco earthquake/fire.![]()
http://www.bookbrowse.com/author_interviews/full/index.cfm?author_number=176
I found this quote by Winchester interesting. Maybe what appeals to me is what appeals to him: we're both trying to figure out how to keep these 'unexpected' catastrophes from sneaking up on us humans?
"I find the science behind major natural events almost more interesting than the way in which those same events wreak their effects on human society. The nature of catastrophe is, after all, reasonably unvarying in the way it ruins, destroys, wounds and devastates. But if something can be learned from the event -- not least something as profound as the theory of plate tectonics -- then it somehow puts the ruination into a much more positive light."