Pages: 224 (Hardcover) Reading Level: Ages 9-12 ISBN: 0802713122 Pub: Walker & Company Pub date: 1995 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 512493
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Editorial Review:The thorniest scientific problem of the 18th century was how to determine longitude. Many thousands of lives had been lost at sea over the centuries due to the inability to determine an east-west position. This is the engrossing story of the clockmaker, John "Longitude" Harrison, who solved the problem that Newton and Galileo had failed to conquer, yet claimed only half the promised rich reward. --Amazon.com Reader Reviews:Tick Tock (4/6 people found this helpful)The epic story on the search for the holy grail of maritime navigation, how to calculate longitude? This is the story and the unlikely triumph of an English genius who more or less solved the age old problem of obtaining accurate longitude position fixes by the use of chronometers.
Very Good (0/1 people found this helpful)Longitude does not at the outset seem a very interesting idea for a book but this is a mistaken assumption. It is very well written, not overly technical plus has a pace to it which keeps the reader intrested. All in all a very good book. We cannot 'keep' time - only record its passing (0/0 people found this helpful)A well researched, beautifully written history of the race to measure longitude. I get the feeling from this book that Harrison was probably the most altruistic of all the rearchers looking for this'Holy Grail' of the sea. For me, Sobel has once again triumphed as she did in 'Galileos Daughter'. Neither here nor there... (2/8 people found this helpful)Dava Sobel writes with such clarity and passion for her subject that I found myself easily drawn into this engaging subject.
Enjoyable, but only part of the picture. (7/7 people found this helpful)This is an enjoyable book, but it is a pity that in making a good tale, the author has given such an unbalanced account. The Harrison chronometer was far from being the "solution" to the Longitude problem that Sobel implies. When Captain Vancouver sailed from England to the Pacific North West of America in the 1790's his two Harrison chronometers were showing times forty five minutes apart by the time he got there, making them useless. The "lunar distance method" gave the necessary correction. Captain Cook and his officers used lunar distances successfully in Australia, and when Joshua Slocum made his famous single handed voyage around the world, he carried a cheap alarm clock rather than chronometers because he used lunar distances. Enjoy the book, but look further, and look beyond crude hero and villain stereotypes! Similar ProductsLongitude [1999] Galileo's Daughter: A Drama of Science, Faith and Love Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: August 27, 1883 Longitude [2000] CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Biography -> General
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