Rating:  Summary: Quick, wonderful read - filled with wonder! Review: A fantastic little book that will remind you of wonder, make you wonder at the world around you, and help you stop ignoring the variety and patterns to which we've become numb.
Rating:  Summary: Fragmenties? Review: A thought-provoking introduction to reading the built environment by close observation. However, Stilgoe's attitude is a bit elitist. The "explorer" in his parlance is vastly superior to us ordinary humans. I don't think as few people as he imagines pay attention to the edges and fringes of highways, strip malls and industrial parks. The thing that really threw me? He twice mentions "Fragmenties", an invasive introduced plant. Unless fragmenties is a really localized phenomenon - localized to where Stilgoe bicycles only, I think he's referring to Phragmites a native grass gone invasive at least partly due to reduced salinity in salt marshes cut off from the twice daily tidal flooding. So, take what he says with a grain of salt and check other references. If you want inspiration to go out there and look around in the urban clutter to see what's really there, try One Square Mile on the Atlantic Coast: An Artist's Journal of the New Jersey Shore by John R. Quinn.
Rating:  Summary: Its a Start... Review: Good introduction book on observing the world around us. It seems like there should be so much more written on this topic. I recommend this book although I admit also that the writer's style can get to you sometimes (however, I wouldn't go so far as to say the author is overly pretentious). Anyway, I also recommend "The Meadowlands" if you are interested in this type of book.
Rating:  Summary: New Age History Review: I had heard Stilgoe on a recent NPR show, and was looking forward to reading his observations about our changing built environment. While there is a smattering of interesting information (i.e., the fact that AC and DC currents once vied with each other in homes), the majority of it is so much fluffy, new agey, and poorly written observations. For the same price, I recommend a much more complete and fascinating book about observing change, "How Buildings Learn" by Stewart Brand. It's spectacular.
Rating:  Summary: Curt Raffi Review: John Stilgoe once again captures the imagination of the reader and encourages us to truly "see", not just "inhabit" the world that lies all around us. As in his other works, he teaches us that history and archaeology are not just a part of musty museums, but of the every day built environment. There is a history behind everything that we come across in our daily lives and he wants us to take a second as a child might and think about the environment in which we live. Having had the opportunity to take classes he taught at Harvard, this book enabled me to reenter his world of delicate insight and deep knowledge about what many in our society simply overlook or have forgotten. If you like pop culture, history, walking down forgotten railroad beds or simply enjoy driving down unknown roads, Stilgoe will capture you.
Rating:  Summary: Curt Raffi Review: John Stilgoe once again captures the imagination of the reader and encourages us to truly "see", not just "inhabit" the world that lies all around us. As in his other works, he teaches us that history and archaeology are not just a part of musty museums, but of the every day built environment. There is a history behind everything that we come across in our daily lives and he wants us to take a second as a child might and think about the environment in which we live. Having had the opportunity to take classes he taught at Harvard, this book enabled me to reenter his world of delicate insight and deep knowledge about what many in our society simply overlook or have forgotten. If you like pop culture, history, walking down forgotten railroad beds or simply enjoy driving down unknown roads, Stilgoe will capture you.
Rating:  Summary: pulling edges to the center Review: Mr. Stilgoe may be, for others, a good guide to exploring the environment as modified by man, but for me his tone and careless treatment of facts are offputting. First--tone: He uses the personna of "the explorer" throughout, the explorer walks and bikes and examines lines (electric, telegraph, telephone, fence), roads, towns, etc. The explorer is definitely urban and politically liberal. That doesn't bother me, but the constant certitude does. Because the "explorer" is an abstraction there's no humanity for the reader to identify with as a counterweight when the explorer's facts are wrong. (Compare him with Mr. Edward Hoagland in "Compass Points" who explicitly takes positions and is very, very human. You respect the man even though you disagree with his views.) Second--what facts do I consider wrong? * Differences over fencing did not contribute to the Civil War. * The Constitution does not prohibit road building, it explicitly (Article I, Section 8, Clause 8) gives Congress the power to establish post-offices and post roads. As I was taught in high school history, Congress appropriated money to build the "National Road" in Jefferson's administration. (I did have to doublecheck my facts by doing an Net search.) *Although there were legitimate military benefits to the interstate highway system, in Mr. Stilgoe's tale "Congress built the system as a weapon, as a military highway, because it feared the enduring power of the constitutional prohibition against building ordinary roads." [p. 96] * Stilgoe also falls for the urban legend (see http://www.snopes.com) that the roads were planned to be used as emergency landing strips for B-52's. It's a tribute to the clear writing and the different subject matter that I finished the book.
Rating:  Summary: Magic and Facts Don't Mix Well Review: Mr. Stilgoe may be, for others, a good guide to exploring the environment as modified by man, but for me his tone and careless treatment of facts are offputting. First--tone: He uses the personna of "the explorer" throughout, the explorer walks and bikes and examines lines (electric, telegraph, telephone, fence), roads, towns, etc. The explorer is definitely urban and politically liberal. That doesn't bother me, but the constant certitude does. Because the "explorer" is an abstraction there's no humanity for the reader to identify with as a counterweight when the explorer's facts are wrong. (Compare him with Mr. Edward Hoagland in "Compass Points" who explicitly takes positions and is very, very human. You respect the man even though you disagree with his views.) Second--what facts do I consider wrong? * Differences over fencing did not contribute to the Civil War. * The Constitution does not prohibit road building, it explicitly (Article I, Section 8, Clause 8) gives Congress the power to establish post-offices and post roads. As I was taught in high school history, Congress appropriated money to build the "National Road" in Jefferson's administration. (I did have to doublecheck my facts by doing an Net search.) *Although there were legitimate military benefits to the interstate highway system, in Mr. Stilgoe's tale "Congress built the system as a weapon, as a military highway, because it feared the enduring power of the constitutional prohibition against building ordinary roads." [p. 96] * Stilgoe also falls for the urban legend (see http://www.snopes.com) that the roads were planned to be used as emergency landing strips for B-52's. It's a tribute to the clear writing and the different subject matter that I finished the book.
Rating:  Summary: Fascinating and Enervating Review: Possibly the most fascinating book I have read since Carl Sagan's "The Dragons of Eden". How often do you read a book that makes you want to get up off your chair (perhaps taking the book with you if you haven't finished yet) and wander off for outside adventures with its tantalizing accounts of what you will find in your neighborhood and town, and their outlying areas?!
Stilgoe draws us out into the "real world" page by page in this exploration of the modern world around us, its intriguing history of urban and rural constructions, and what it all means. A great book especially in that once you have read it, it continues giving to you as you take what you have learned from it and go further into the everyday world with it.
Talking about this book practically makes me jump up and down with excitement over the possibilities. No, wait -- it's LITERAL! I am, in fact, jumping up and down.
Rating:  Summary: pulling edges to the center Review: Stilgoe makes us consider the ordinary in extraordinary ways. The "solutions" some seek (self-help book overload, I'm afraid) ARE indeed here - you just have to look.
|