30 Apr 2018

The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science - by Richard Holmes

Another book club book, which looked interesting. Here’s the blurb:

Shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize and winner of the Royal Society Prize for Science Books, Richard Holmes’s dazzling portrait of the age of great scientific discovery is a groundbreaking achievement.
The book opens with Joseph Banks, botanist on Captain Cook’s first Endeavour voyage, who stepped onto a Tahitian beach in 1769 fully expecting to have located Paradise. Back in Britain, the same Romantic revolution that had inspired Banks was spurring other great thinkers on to their own voyages of artistic and scientific discovery – astronomical, chemical, poetical, philosophical – that together made up the ‘age of wonder’.
In this breathtaking group biography, Richard Holmes tells the stories of the period’s celebrated innovators and their great scientific discoveries: from telescopic sight to the miner’s lamp, and from the first balloon flight to African exploration.

The book was interesting, but it was far too long and, hence, took me an age to read. I enjoyed a lot of it - particularly the details of the lives of some of the scientists and the connections between them. I could live without all the poetical stuff.

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