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Timekeepers: How the World Became Obsessed With Time Main [Hardback]

3.40/5 (1195 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 368 pages, height x width x depth: 220x144x33 mm, weight: 505 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Sep-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Canongate Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782113193
  • ISBN-13: 9781782113195
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 368 pages, height x width x depth: 220x144x33 mm, weight: 505 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 29-Sep-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Canongate Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782113193
  • ISBN-13: 9781782113195
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Not so long ago we timed our lives by the movement of the sun. These days our time arrives atomically and insistently, and our lives are propelled by the notion that we will never have enough of the one thing we crave the most. How have we come to be dominated by something so arbitrary The compelling stories in this book explore our obsessions with time. An Englishman arrives back from Calcutta but refuses to adjust his watch. Beethoven has his symphonic wishes ignored. A moment of war is frozen forever. The timetable arrives by steam train. A woman designs a ten-hour clock and reinvents the calendar. Roger Bannister becomes stuck in the same four minutes forever. A British watchmaker competes with mighty Switzerland. And a prince attempts to stop time in its tracks.Timekeepers is a vivid exploration of the ways we have perceived, contained and saved time over the last 250 years, narrated in the highly inventive and entertaining style that bestselling author Simon Garfield is fast making his own. As managing time becomes the greatest challenge we face in our lives, this multi-layered history helps us tackle it in a sparkling new light.

An entertaining and authoritative exploration of how and why time has come to rule our lives from the bestselling author of Just My Type

Recenzijas

Thoroughly enjoyable and illuminating . . . Stuffed with fascinating material * * Observer * * Digressive, gossipy, thoughtful and thoroughly entertaining . . . Simon Garfield is an exuberant truffle-hound of the recondite and delightful factoid * * The Sunday Times * * A sort of museum between hard covers. Timekeepers is as good as pop history gets * * Sunday Express * * An eclectic collection of explorations of our relationships with time . . . Very readable * * The Times * * Delightful * * Sunday Telegraph * * Time well spent . . . Simon Garfield has made his name as an author who can spin fascinating narratives out of subjects that seem, on the face of it, narrow to the point of being dull * * Financial Times * * Delightful . . . Gloriously funny . . . Garfield has an astonishing capacity for meticulous research and a wonderful ability to select the best stories to entertain us * * Daily Express * * Engaging . . . Engrossing * * Mail on Sunday * * Entertaining . . . jaunty . . . Scholarly but jokey, with a magpie's appetite for glittering trivia, Garfield is as eager to amuse as to inform, and achieves both * * Telegraph * * Hugely enjoyable -- ROB MCKIE * * Observer * * In this book, brilliant cultural historian Simon Garfield assembles a host of intriguing characters who have tried to bend time to their own rules, and questions how we came to be ruled by something so arbitrary * * Elle * * Garfield's anecdotal, science-friendly book explores the tyranny of time and our desire to control it * * Saga * * There could be no better guide than Simon Garfield for this journey into time and its meaning for our lives. From the assembly line to the French Revolution, he covers the quirks of the clock with insight and wry enthusiasm. A riveting, educational read -- DANIEL PINK, author of Drive A delightful study of timekeeping . . . Garfield is as eager to amuse as to inform, and achieves both * * Telegraph * *

Introduction: Very, Very Early or Very, Very Late 1(8)
1 The Accident of Time
i) Leaving the Ground
9(5)
ii) The Shortness of Life and How to Live It
14(9)
2 How the French Messed Up the Calendar
23(14)
3 The Invention of the Timetable
i) The Fastest Thing You Ever Did See
37(6)
ii) Was Ever Tyranny More Monstrous?
43(14)
4 The Beet Goes On
i) The Way to Play the Ninth
57(14)
ii) Just How Long Should a CD Be?
71(4)
iii) Revolver
75(12)
5 How Much Talking Is Too Much Talking?
i) In the Time of Moses
87(6)
ii) Talking It Over
93(16)
6 Movie Time
i) How You Get to the Clock
109(6)
ii) Oncoming Train
115(10)
7 Horology Part One: How to Make a Watch
i) A Very Difficult Floor
125(12)
ii) Just What Is It about the Swiss?
137(12)
8 Roger Bannister Goes Round and Round
149(12)
9 Vietnam. Napalm. Girl
i) The Split Second
161(9)
ii) `I am Muybridge and this is a message from my wife'
170(11)
10 The Day Shift
i) We Will Crush, Squash, Slaughter Yamaha!
181(9)
ii) The Boss from Hell
190(11)
11 Horology Part Two: How to Sell the Time
i) Vasco da Gama Special Edition
201(6)
ii) Welcome to Baselworld
207(10)
iii) Uh-oh
217(3)
iv) In Which We Name the Guilty Man
220(5)
v) The Most Valuable Watch on the Planet
225(6)
12 Time Tactics That Work!
i) The Berry Season
231(9)
ii) The Lean Email Simple System
240(11)
13 Life Is Short, Art Is Long
i) The Clock Is a Clock
251(12)
ii) White People Are Crazy
263(8)
14 Slowing Down the World
i) A Place Where Time Stands Still
271(8)
ii) Living Frenchly
279(7)
iii) Faster Food
286(7)
15 The British Museum and the Story of Us
i) The Book of Hours
293(8)
ii) Doomed and Marooned
301(11)
iii) Those Who Feel Differently
312(11)
Epilogue: Humility Watch 323(8)
Acknowledgements and Further Reading 331(6)
Picture Credits 337(2)
Index 339
Simon Garfield is the author of seventeen acclaimed books of non-fiction including A Notable Woman (as editor), To the Letter, On the Map, Just My Type and Mauve. His study of AIDS in Britain, The End of Innocence, won the Somerset Maugham prize. www.simongarfield.com