Joyce E. Chaplin is the James Duncan Phillips Professor of History at Harvard University. She is the author of four previous books of nonfiction, including The First Scientific American: Benjamin Franklin and the Pursuit of Genius (2006), a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Science and Technology Category), and winner of the Annibel Jenkins Prize of American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies.
“A richly textured narrative. … Colorful adventures … fill the
pages of this unconventional world history…Chaplin knows how to
tell an absorbing story, weaving compelling reflections together
with captivating vignettes. Augmented by first-person accounts, her
prose can call to mind the late Samuel Eliot Morison, another
Harvard historian whose dramatic narratives frequently unfolded at
sea.”
*Wall Street Journal*
“By chronicling the way humans have traveled around the world in
the past 500 years, Joyce Chaplin shows the interplay of
aspirations and technology, from sail and steam to jets and
rockets. More profoundly, she explores what it means to circle our
globe, act on a planetary scale, and encompass both figuratively
and literally the whole earth.”
*Walter Isaacson, author of Steve Jobs*
“[Chaplin writes] with a storyteller’s brevity and dry wit in this
captivating account of world-rounding expeditions.”
*The New York Times Book Review*
“In this thrilling history, Joyce Chaplin has illuminated one of
the greatest dramas of humankind: the quest to journey around the
globe. She not only brilliantly brings to life these mad-cap
explorations; she shows how they transformed our understanding of
the planet.”
*David Grann, author of The Lost City of Z*
“This history, the first of its kind, is a lively charge through
500 years of worldwide exploration (and beyond)….Chaplin's greatest
feat is convincingly demonstrating that circumnavigation is not
just a series of dates, death tallies and speed records… In the
present day, that sense of collective, global history is more
urgent than ever.”
*Los Angeles Times*
“Weaving myriad connections among disparate voyagers, Chaplin
combines acute insights with amazing adventures in a vastly
entertaining narrative.” [Starred Review]
*Booklist*
“Hardship, frolic, barnstorming, and spiritual enigma shape this
scintillating history of round-the-world travel…The book’s heart is
its profusion of entertaining travel picaresques with their gallery
of colorful figures on grand, eccentric, or piratical
quests…Chaplin is such a charming, perceptive raconteur that we’re
happy to drift in the eddies of her prose.” [Starred Review]
*Publishers Weekly*
“All the voyagers who have ventured fearful into the vast unknown
spaces of our planet have a patron saint: Harvard historian Joyce
Chaplin. Did she, like them, really appreciate what she was getting
into when she set sail to track the adventures of the
circumnavigators by sail, steam, and spaceship over 500 years?
The risks for Chaplin, as the first complete chronicler of the
globe-circlers, were that she would either get becalmed in a
Pacific ocean of research, or lose the narrative thread in
unloading all her plunder.
The reader may safely embark with eager anticipation. She can be
welcomed home with garlands. Her book is a treasure of thrilling
stories, replete with insights into the advances of science,
technology and medicine, and it’s reflective, too. The planet we
encircle and embrace is our only home in the cosmos."
*Sir Harold Evans, author of The American Century*
“Joyce Chaplin is a great historian with a fresh eye and a sure
touch. She is a story teller with keen insight, command of the
material, a sense of whimsy, and a flair for portraying human
drama. What a wonderful way to go around the world."
*Evan Thomas, author of Ike’s Bluff*
“Rich in detail, fresh perspective and even wit, it’s a sweeping
discourse that covers the 500 years from Portuguese explorer
Magellan to contemporary times. It’s a tale of adventure, danger
and fascinating insight into what has, for five centuries,
compelled humans to ‘take on’ the planet…
marvelous…fascinating.”
*American Profile*
People who set out to travel around the world are a special breed, distinct from other explorers and travelers, says Chaplin (history, Harvard Univ.; The First Scientific American: Benjamin Franklin and the Pursuit of Genius). What makes them so special? Chaplin posits that it's their ability to think on a planetary scale and that their voyages are measured in time, space, and death. Her book is divided into three acts of "geodrama," a term the author uses to describe how the around-the-world voyage requires the traveler to give his or her whole self over to the endeavor, initially to master the earth and, later, to protect it. "Fear" covers Magellan to Cook (1519-1775), when round-the-world travel was extremely dangerous and such explorers were lucky to survive. "Confidence" covers from the 1780s to the 1920s, when colonialism, and improvements in technology, made circumnavigation less risky. "Doubt" extends from the 1920s to the present, a period in which new modes of transportation took the traveler to new heights and dizzying speeds and even farther from terra firma. VERDICT This accessible and well-researched book offers a concise and compelling history of circumnavigation. It deserves a spot on all library shelves, especially libraries with exploration and geography collections, and is recommended to all armchair explorers.-Margaret Atwater-Singer, Univ. of Evansville Libs., IN (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
"A richly textured narrative. ... Colorful adventures ... fill the
pages of this unconventional world history...Chaplin knows how to
tell an absorbing story, weaving compelling reflections together
with captivating vignettes. Augmented by first-person accounts, her
prose can call to mind the late Samuel Eliot Morison, another
Harvard historian whose dramatic narratives frequently unfolded at
sea." * Wall Street Journal *
"By chronicling the way humans have traveled around the world in
the past 500 years, Joyce Chaplin shows the interplay of
aspirations and technology, from sail and steam to jets and
rockets. More profoundly, she explores what it means to circle our
globe, act on a planetary scale, and encompass both figuratively
and literally the whole earth." -- Walter Isaacson, author of Steve
Jobs
"[Chaplin writes] with a storyteller's brevity and dry wit in this
captivating account of world-rounding expeditions." * The New York
Times Book Review *
"In this thrilling history, Joyce Chaplin has illuminated one of
the greatest dramas of humankind: the quest to journey around the
globe. She not only brilliantly brings to life these mad-cap
explorations; she shows how they transformed our understanding of
the planet." -- David Grann, author of The Lost City of Z
"This history, the first of its kind, is a lively charge through
500 years of worldwide exploration (and beyond)....Chaplin's
greatest feat is convincingly demonstrating that circumnavigation
is not just a series of dates, death tallies and speed records...
In the present day, that sense of collective, global history is
more urgent than ever." * Los Angeles Times *
"Weaving myriad connections among disparate voyagers, Chaplin
combines acute insights with amazing adventures in a vastly
entertaining narrative." [Starred Review] * Booklist *
"Hardship, frolic, barnstorming, and spiritual enigma shape this
scintillating history of round-the-world travel...The book's heart
is its profusion of entertaining travel picaresques with their
gallery of colorful figures on grand, eccentric, or piratical
quests...Chaplin is such a charming, perceptive raconteur that
we're happy to drift in the eddies of her prose." [Starred
Review] * Publishers Weekly *
"All the voyagers who have ventured fearful into the vast unknown
spaces of our planet have a patron saint: Harvard historian Joyce
Chaplin. Did she, like them, really appreciate what she was getting
into when she set sail to track the adventures of the
circumnavigators by sail, steam, and spaceship over 500 years?
The risks for Chaplin, as the first complete chronicler of the
globe-circlers, were that she would either get becalmed in a
Pacific ocean of research, or lose the narrative thread in
unloading all her plunder.
The reader may safely embark with eager anticipation. She can be
welcomed home with garlands. Her book is a treasure of thrilling
stories, replete with insights into the advances of science,
technology and medicine, and it's reflective, too. The planet we
encircle and embrace is our only home in the cosmos." -- Sir Harold
Evans, author of The American Century
"Joyce Chaplin is a great historian with a fresh eye and a sure
touch. She is a story teller with keen insight, command of the
material, a sense of whimsy, and a flair for portraying human
drama. What a wonderful way to go around the world." -- Evan
Thomas, author of Ike's Bluff
"Rich in detail, fresh perspective and even wit, it's a sweeping
discourse that covers the 500 years from Portuguese explorer
Magellan to contemporary times. It's a tale of adventure, danger
and fascinating insight into what has, for five centuries,
compelled humans to 'take on' the planet...
marvelous...fascinating." * American Profile *
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