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America, 1908: The Dawn of Flight, the Race to the Pole, the Invention of the Model T and the Making of a ... | Jim Rasenberger | America 1908. A great read
 
 


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America, 1908: The Dawn of Flight, the Race to the Pole, the Invention of the Model T and the Making of a ...
Jim Rasenberger

Scribner, 2007 - 320 pages

average customer review:based on 18 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended



A breathtaking ride through the highs and lows of one spectacular, pivotal year in American history.

As the earth turned toward the sun on the first morning of 1908, human flight remained, for most Americans, in the realm of myth and dream. But before the darkness fell on New Year's Eve at the end of the year, the Wright brothers would be worldwide celebrities, heralded as the first people in all of human history to conquer the sky.

It was the year Teddy Roosevelt sent the Great White Fleet on a voyage around the globe, Robert Peary began his courageous dash to the North Pole, six automobiles left Times Square on an epic twenty-thousand-mile race to Paris, and Henry Ford introduced an oddly shaped new automobile called the Model T.

It was a time of seemingly boundless innovation - everything was bigger, better, fast, and greater than ever before. In New York and Chicago, banks of high-speed elevators zipped through vertical shafts in the tallest buildings on earth. Pneumatic tubes whisked mail between far-flung post offices in minutes. Women cleaned their homes with amazing new devices called vacuums. And as American engineers cut a fifty-mile canal through the Isthmus of Panama, the very air buzzed with the imagined potential of new technology, including a "portable wireless telephone" that would someday allow people to talk while they walked.

Meanwhile, the New York Giants battled the Chicago Cubs in one of the most thrilling seasons in baseball history, and a reluctant William Howard Taft was elected twenty-seventh president of the United States.

By turns gripping and humorous, shocking and delightful, Jim Rasenberger's America, 1908 brings to life our nation as it was one hundred years ago, at a moment of delirious optimism and pride, a time when Americans believed that even the most intractable problems would soon be solved and that the future was bound to be better than the past.

"What will the year 2008 bring us?" pondered the New York World on New Year's Day of 1908. "What marvels of development await the youth of tomorrow?" As Thomas Edison said later that year, "Anything, everything, is possible."

Shedding new light on stories we thought we knew and telling fresh stories we can't believe we've never heard, American, 1908 is a rousing chronicle of a country on the brink of greatness - and a timely, thought-provoking glimpse at a younger America, even as we wonder what awaits us in the century ahead.




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America 1908

Wonderful book, hard to believe that all this took place only 100 years ago.
Great read!


America 1908. A great read

If you are curious about the world of a century ago, this is a delightful introduction. It is a great book to pack for a weekend away or a long airplane trip. Looking for a Christmas or birthday present? Your friends who like the History Channel will enjoy this accessible and entertaining set of interwoven stories and adventures.

This is a well written narrative of one year of an era during which America was still ascending toward her zenith and her people were generally upright, self-reliant and optimistic. The author makes an effort to balance a lively look at a great past with an examination of difficult details of the nation's history. His early 21st century vantage point skews his focus at times; however, that is just one reader's perception, only perhaps to be shared by a small minority who have already devoted study to the period.

On the whole, a very good read.


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It was a Good Year

Some years are special and some years are not. 1908 was a great year for the USA. As a country that was starting to feel its oats and garner international attention, it was a year when probably average Americans saw how their country ranked on the international stage. As the author points out, Americans were conquering the air, the great Automobile race and the Model T promised that America would have a piece of the action and a future to share with the automobile. Even more important, Henry Ford's factory system would become the dominant system of American industry. On the ocean, America's navy was on par with the great powers. American explorers were on the cutting edge. The book is written in a chronological style. Many of the main stories were presented like a movie with too many flashbacks,. it was not confusing, but I would have preferred a subject by subject approach rather than a monthly timetable.
A very enjoyble book and a good reminder of where this country came from.



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Obvious Erroe Raises Questions

I was really enjoying the book until an obvious error jumped out at me. I then wondered about some of the author's other statements. Do I believe everything he said? The book was an enjoyable read until I ran across the mistake. The author must not be a baseball fan, because his mistake was quite basic. He described a play (not the Merkle play) in which the batter had a base hit but the runner at 1st was forced at 2nd. If a baserunner is forced, there is no hit credited to the batter. This is an extremely basic rule. I find it incredible that the mistake was not caught in the editing process.


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Good book except for small print

This is an interesting book for older people. Unfortunately, most of us cannot read the fine print. Why would a publisher produce such a book in extra small print?America, 1908: The Dawn of Flight, the Race to the Pole, the Invention of the Model T and the Making of a Modern Nation


reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4



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