Recounts the history of 100 of the most significant 20th century inventions
Imagine your average day without zippers, airplanes or vacuum cleaners, without your clock radio or your personal stereo, without photocopiers. All of these devices were invented within the last hundred years and have since transformed our daily landscape.
Drawing on The British Library's vast and comprehensive collection of patents, this handsomely illustrated book recounts the history of 100 of the most significant inventions of the century, decade by decade.
From the photocopier to the Slinky, from genetic fingerprinting to the Lava Lamp, from the ballpoint pen to the fuel cell, Inventing the Twentieth Century is an informative, illuminating window onto the technology of the twentieth century. It's the perfect gift book for every inventor and tinkerer in your life!
NOT a book about "the most significant 20th century inventions."
The subtitle says, "100 inventions that shaped the world," and the preface states, "this book describes 100 significant, or at least interesting, inventions..." In fact, the book has profound inventions (transistor) as well as inconsequential inventions (silly putty). Did silly putty or Scrabble shape the world?
The index is incomplete. For example, missing from the index are Kennedy, John F. (p. 148) and Internet (p. 149.) But worse, the writing is painfully abstruse. For example, "The 1970s were to confirm the beginning of much reduction and rationalisation of industry some of it, like shipbuilding and steel, moving increasingly to the cheaper Far East."
And this whopper: But if many of the hopes of the early decade were tarnished by its end international cooperation and shared concerns, together with the ability to speak freely in so many countries, were still far greater than the years of the Cold War and of Vietnam would have foreseen.
You can peruse yourself at archive.org. The book is copyright by The British Library Board.
A fun book with cool illustrations. Although the writing is dry, the decade by decade synopses are concise and thorough (except for ignoring the art world completely), and it is interesting to know what was invented when, and by whom.