Gentle List, I have just finished listening to "The Age of Wood" and want to
add my recommendation as well. It's the sort of 'why things are the way they
are' book that I so enjoy. Enos' book is wide-ranging but with a constant
thread of Wood throughout. I found it to be fascinating.
Cheers,
John (Who is now halfway through "Firepower--How Weapons Shaped Warfare" another
fascinating 'why things are the way they are' book)
-----Original Message-----
Don wrote:
I am currently near to finishing 'The Age of Wood' (Roland Enos, Scribner), a
fascinating anthropological/historical account of the role of wood in the
history of our specie and civilizations. I recommend it highly. One interesting
bit which I gleaned concerns Joseph Moxon, author of the Mechanick Exercises.
Moxon was promoted as a fellow to the Royal Society, the first tradesman to be
so honoured, by scientist Robert Hooke, who helped him publish his works, which
Enos describes as 'the first-ever set of DIY manuals'.
FWIW
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