America the Ingenious
How a Nation of Dreamers, Immigrants, and Tinkerers Changed the World
by Kevin Baker
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Pub Date Oct 04 2016 | Archive Date Feb 05 2017
Artisan Books | Artisan
Description
—The Wall Street Journal
All made in America: The skyscraper and subway car. The telephone and telegraph. The safety elevator and safety pin. Plus the microprocessor, amusement park, MRI, supermarket, Pennsylvania rifle, and Tennessee Valley Authority. Not to mention the city of Chicago or jazz or that magnificent Golden Gate Bridge.
What is it about America that makes it a nation of inventors, tinkerers, researchers, and adventurers—obsessive pursuers of the never-before-created? And, equally, what is it that makes America such a fertile place to explore, discover, and launch the next big thing?
In America the Ingenious, bestselling author Kevin Baker brings his gift of storytelling and eye for historical detail to the grand, and grandly entertaining, tale of American innovation. Here are the Edisons and Bells and Carnegies, and the stories of how they followed their passions and changed our world. And also the less celebrated, like Jacob Youphes and Loeb Strauss, two Jewish immigrants from Germany who transformed the way at least half the world now dresses (hint: Levi Strauss). And Leo Fender, who couldn’t play a note of music, midwifing rock ’n’ roll through his solid-body electric guitar and amplifier. And the many women who weren’t legally recognized as inventors, but who created things to make their lives easier that we use every day—like Josephine Cochran, inventor of the dishwasher, or Marion O’Brien Donovan, who invented a waterproof diaper cover. Or a guy with the improbable name of Philo Farnsworth, who, with his invention of television, upended communication as significantly as Gutenberg did.
At a time when America struggles with different visions of what it wants to be, America the Ingenious shows the extraordinary power of what works: how immigration leads to innovation, what a strong government and strong public education mean to a climate of positive practical change, and why taking the long view instead of looking for short-term gain pays off many times over, not only for investors and inventors, but for the rest of us whose lives are made better by the new.
America and its nation of immigrants have excelled at taking ideas from anywhere and transforming them into the startling, often unexpectedly beautiful creations that have shaped our world. This is that story.
Advance Praise
“Kevin Baker, inspired
master of the historical novel, celebrates America’s moxie in this
kaleidoscopic canon of invention and innovation. By unpacking the provenance of
eclectic novelties, from the safety pin to the supermarket and the subway,
Baker identifies the visionaries and values that defined the American
dream.”
—Sam Roberts, The New York Times
“Kevin Baker has the
storytelling ability of a novelist (which he is) and the historical chops of a
scholar (which he also is). America
the Ingenious is, itself, ingenious—both endlessly entertaining and
thoroughly edifying.”
—Daniel Okrent, New York Times bestselling author of Last Call: The Rise and Fall of
Prohibition
“From the electric guitar to the farm combine, the safety pin to the Conestoga
wagon, from Pampers to blue jeans and the telegraph: Kevin Baker’s ingenious,
eclectic, and breathtaking chronicle of American invention reminds us of the
daring, the love for experimentation, and the resilient optimism that is
America at its very best—a land of freedom, imagination, diversity, and
grand-hearted authors like Kevin Baker.”
—Brenda Wineapple,
award-winning author of Ecstatic
Nation: Confidence, Crisis, and Compromise, 1848–1877
“From Kevin Baker’s typewriter emerges a past that is no longer about places
and dates but a bunch of often hilarious misfits stumbling through the most
uncanny events and into fantastic stories that readers will be forgiven for not
immediately recognizing, through their laughter and tears, as profound American
history.”
—Jack Hitt, author of Bunch of Amateurs: A Search for the
American Character
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781579656942 |
PRICE | $29.95 (USD) |