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Timekeepers

How the World Became Obsessed with Time

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
By the bestselling author of Just My Type: a “thoroughly enjoyable and illuminating” journey into the concept of time “stuffed with fascinating material” (Observer, UK).
Timekeepers is a book about our obsession with time and our desire to measure it, control it, sell it, film it, perform it, immortalize it and make it meaningful. In this fascinating, anecdotal exploration, award-winning author Simon Garfield has two simple intentions: to tell some illuminating stories, and to ask whether we have all gone completely nuts.
Here, Garfield explores the nature of time through stories such as: the Beatles learning to be brilliant in an hour and a half; an Englishman arriving back from Calcutta, refusing to adjust his watch; Beethoven’s symphonic wishes being ignored; a US Senator’s speech that goes for 25 hours; the horrors of war frozen at the click of a camera; a woman who designs a ten-hour clock and reinvents the calendar; Roger Bannister living out the same four minutes over a lifetime; and a who prince attempts to stop time in its tracks.
“Digressive, gossipy, thoughtful and thoroughly entertaining.”—The Sunday Times, UK
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 9, 2017
      British journalist and author Garfield (To the Letter) chronicles the very human obsession with time in this lively, wry, and captivating work of pop science. Garfield attributes his personal fascination with the topic to a bad bicycle accident that highlighted for him the way time seems to speed up or slow down depending on what a person is experiencing. From that entry point, Garfield traverses far and wide across his subject. The chapter “How the French Messed Up the Calendar” looks at the French Revolution–era plan to decimalize time with a 10-hour day and a French anarchist who in 1894 tried, unsuccessfully, to blow up the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, England. Elsewhere in the book, Garfield tackles such topics as luxury watchmaking, political filibusters, and railway timetables, providing a sumptuous banquet of food for thought about how technology shapes the way we work, as well as how films are produced and music is written and performed. Here the “Doomsday Clock” of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists and self-help books, including Thoreau’s Walden and modern texts on time management, become newly thought-provoking and laugh-out-loud funny. Exhibiting dry wit and fizzing with insatiable curiosity, Garfield collects enough eccentric characters, places, and ideas to entertain every reader.

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  • English

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