Lovely review of Invention by John Gapper in today's Financial Times:
cultural progress, and tales of Priestley's experiments, feels almost as
full of ingenuity and as delightful as its subject. It fizzes with
exposition, anecdote, and intellectual asides.
I just noticed that the Amazon page for the book has been updated with a collection of quotes from the reviews. Always exciting to see them all strung together. I've posted them after the jump if anyone is interested in reading through them all...
“[Johnson is] an infectiously exciting writer [and] The Invention of Air
is delightful to read. But it aims high. It isn't a work of
conventional history or biography, though it contains snippets of both,
but more like a case study in the history of ideas that hints at a
grander analytical theory. Johnson is a wide-ranging enthusiast with a
catholic appetite for intriguing facts and a Marxian appetite for
searching for structures that underlie social phenomena.”
—Salon
“Like Priestley, Johnson—who wrote the bestselling Everything Bad Is Good For You—is
a polymath, and … [it’s] exhilarating to follow his unpredictable
trains of thought. To explain why some ideas upend the world, he draws
upon many disciplines: chemistry, social history, geography, even
ecosystem science.”
—Los Angeles Times
“Steven
Johnson’s mind works in wondrous ways and readers have been the
beneficiaries of his eclectic interests. Johnson’s new book, The Invention of Air, marks a return to cultural history …His free-ranging mind and irreverent wit entertain and prompt thought.”
—Seattle Post-Intelligencer
“Steven Johnson argues that [this] key player has been all but
forgotten … An expat, a champion of reason, an original
progressive—Priestley’s ideals were central to the American experiment.
He rarely gets the credit, but he was arguably the United States’
original advocate for hope and change.”
— Newsweek
“This is not a book about the discovery of oxygen but about the
invention of air: how groups of scientists, natural philosophers,
religious leaders and politicians served as cultural petri dishes in
which ideas were discussed, experimented with, discarded or accepted
…[Johnson] gives long-overdue time and space to some of the more
controversial aspects of [Priestley’s] work …Priestley may not have
gotten full credit for his work on oxygen, but this new book gives
plenty to the life of the man himself.”
—Dallas Morning News
“Steven Johnson's latest book, The Invention of Air,
is a wide-ranging, learned, engrossing biography of the polymath
pioneering scientist, Joseph Priestley … Johnson uses the life of
Priestley to illuminate a theory of history that holds that great
people are neither an inevitable product of their times, nor luminous,
supernatural geniuses -- rather, they are the product of an ecosystem
of influences, technologies, climate, and energy (literally -- the
story of stored energy in coal, saltpetre, and plant-bound carbon are
vital to the story). He pulls this off deftly, with a series of
insightful, beautifully realized anaecdotes from the life of Priestley
and his contemporaries -- his allies and his many enemies -- that make
the idea of history being shaped by webs and networks seem absolutely
true.”
— Boingboing
“[Johnson] refracts just about every beam of Enlightenment thought through the prism of Priestley.”
—Seattle Weekly
“We rarely hear of [Joseph Priestley] today, but it wasn't always thus:
the correspondence between Thomas Jefferson and John Adams includes 52
mentions of Priestley, versus just three of George Washington. With The Invention of Air,
Steven Johnson brilliantly explains why … For all of Priestley’s many
achievements, laid out so delightfully in Johnson’s account, it’s his
work with plants and the oxygen cycle that rightfully gained him
immortality … Engrossing.”
—Oregonian
“In The Invention of Air
Steven Johnson gives a biography not just of a man, but a time in which
the spigot of ideas was gradually being cranked wide open. It's a fun
(and quite short) read for anyone interested in the intersection of
science, politics, and religion. It's also an interesting look at how
societies react -- for good and ill -- to periods of rapid change.”
—Daily Kos
“A breath of fresh air … Johnson paints Priestley not as a man of the
past but precisely the sort of figure the world needs more than ever: A
searcher who shared his discoveries openly and willingly, crossed
disciplinary boundaries with impunity and insight, who conceived of the
world as a large laboratory … We live in troubling times, filled with
signs of a great economic apocalypse, politicized science on topics
from birth control to climate change and religious zealots who kill
innocents rather than live peacefully with them. This is exactly the
moment to learn from Priestley, who survived riots, threats of
prosecution and other hardships and yet never doubted that ‘the world
was headed naturally toward and increase in liberty and understanding.’”
—New York Post
“Intelligent … Steven Johnson, who has a fine reputation for discerning
trends and for his iconoclastic appreciation of popular culture,
chooses his topics well. As a reminder of the underlying sanity and
common sense of this country—a reminder perhaps much needed after the
excesses of a displeasing presidential election campaign
—The Invention of Air succeeds like a shot of the purest oxygen.”
— Publishers Weekly (Signature Review)
“Arresting account of the career of Joseph Priestley … Johnson employs
his customary digressiveness to great effect … Another rich, readable
examination of the intersections where culture and science meet from a
scrupulous historian who never offers easy answer to troubling, perhaps
intractable questions.”
—Kirkus
“Joseph Priestley
(1733-1804) was a veritable Renaissance man, whose interests and skills
ranged from science to religion to politics. Science writer Johnson (The Ghost Map)
weaves together all of these themes and how they played out in his
life, in early America, and among the Founding Fathers. He tells the
story [of Priestley] in a reader-friendly manner that also encourages
readers to think about how these themes apply in today’s world.”
—Library Journal
Steven Johnson argues that [this] key player has been all but forgotten … An expat, a champion of reason, an original progressive—Priestley’s ideals were central to the American experiment.
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