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More than any other technology, cars have transformed our culture.
Cars have created vast wealth as well as novel dreams of freedom
and mobility. They have transformed our sense of distance and made
the world infinitely more available to our eyes and our
imaginations. They have inspired cinema, music and literature; they
have, by their need for roads, bridges, filling stations, huge
factories and global supply chains, re-engineered the world. Almost
everything we now need, want, imagine or aspire to assumes the
existence of cars in all their limitless power and their complex
systems of meanings. This book celebrates the immense drama and
beauty of the car, of the genius embodied in the Ford Model T, of
the glory of the brilliant-red Mercedes Benz S-Class made by
workers for Nelson Mandela on his release from prison, of Kanye
West's 'chopped' Maybach, of the salvation of the Volkswagen Beetle
by Major Ivan Hirst, of Elvis Presley's 100 Cadillacs, of the
Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost and the BMC Mini and even of that
harbinger of the end - the Tesla Model S and its creator Elon Musk.
As the age of the car as we know it comes to an end, Bryan
Appleyard's brilliantly insightful book tells the story of the rise
and fall of the incredible machine that made the modern world what
it is today.
More than any other technology, cars have transformed our culture.
Cars have created vast wealth as well as novel dreams of freedom
and mobility. They have transformed our sense of distance and made
the world infinitely more available to our eyes and our
imaginations. They have inspired cinema, music and literature; they
have, by their need for roads, bridges, filling stations, huge
factories and global supply chains, re-engineered the world. Almost
everything we now need, want, imagine or aspire to assumes the
existence of cars in all their limitless power and their complex
systems of meanings. This book celebrates the immense drama and
beauty of the car, of the genius embodied in the Ford Model T, of
the glory of the brilliant-red Mercedes Benz S-Class made by
workers for Nelson Mandela on his release from prison, of Kanye
West's 'chopped' Maybach, of the salvation of the Volkswagen Beetle
by Major Ivan Hirst, of Elvis Presley's 100 Cadillacs, of the
Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost and the BMC Mini and even of that
harbinger of the end - the Tesla Model S and its creator Elon Musk.
As the age of the car as we know it comes to an end, Bryan
Appleyard's brilliantly insightful book tells the story of the rise
and fall of the incredible machine that made the modern world what
it is today.
An evocative historical thriller based in one of London's original
suburbs. Set in 1912, Bedford Park is not just a London suburb: it
is a crucible for enlightenment and modernity inhabited by people
who wish to better themselves - and those who should know better.
It is a singular place, architecturally sidestepping the modern
whilst encouraging those with new ideas to take up residence. Into
this mix sails Cal Kidd from America. In a coffee-house he makes
the acquaintance of Binks, a man whose occupation in the City is
vague but he seems to know everybody. And so Cal meets real-life
characters like Maud Gonne and Frank Harris, while Ford Madox Ford,
W.B. Yeats and Joseph Conrad appear also. Then Binks is gruesomely
murdered, and after never really having to deal with anything in
his life, Cal the observer now has to act. The spirit of the age is
what makes BEDFORD PARK so evocative, a time when everyone tries to
invoke the future but often looks to the past to achieve it. Among
the host of vivid characters, the greatest is London itself, a city
in a constant state of flux whose centre is journalism. All the
detail makes the place exotic and exciting - the marathon at the
Olympics in 1908, a ride on the Flip Flap in White City, news being
chalked up on dock walls for those who couldn't afford papers, a
woman peeling potatoes in the Biosphere cinema in Bishopsgate.
London has to comment instantly upon itself or be commented upon,
always new and important.
More than any other technology, cars have transformed our culture.
Cars have created vast wealth as well as novel dreams of freedom
and mobility. They have transformed our sense of distance and made
the world infinitely more available to our eyes and our
imaginations. They have inspired cinema, music and literature; they
have, by their need for roads, bridges, filling stations, huge
factories and global supply chains, re-engineered the world. Almost
everything we now need, want, imagine or aspire to assumes the
existence of cars in all their limitless power and their complex
systems of meanings. This book celebrates the immense drama and
beauty of the car, of the genius embodied in the Ford Model T, of
the glory of the brilliant-red Mercedes Benz S-Class made by
workers for Nelson Mandela on his release from prison, of Kanye
West's 'chopped' Maybach, of the salvation of the Volkswagen Beetle
by Major Ivan Hirst, of Elvis Presley's 100 Cadillacs, of the
Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost and the BMC Mini and even of that
harbinger of the end - the Tesla Model S and its creator Elon Musk.
As the age of the car as we know it comes to an end, Bryan
Appleyard's brilliantly insightful book tells the story of the rise
and fall of the incredible machine that made the modern world what
it is today.
A brand-new book from the award-winning SUNDAY TIMES journalist
Brian Appleyard. Simplicity has become a brand and a cult. People
want simple lives and simple solutions. And now our technology
wants us to be simpler, to be 'machine readable'. From telephone
call trees that simplify us into a series of 'options' to social
networks that reduce us to our purchases and preferences, we are
deluged with propaganda urging us to abandon our irreducibly
complex selves. At the same time, scientists tell us we are
'simply' the products of evolution, nothing more than our genes.
Brain scanners have inspired neuroscientists to claim they are
close to cracking the problem of the human mind. 'Human equivalent'
computers are being designed that, we are told, will do our
thinking for us. Humans are being simplified out of existence. It
is time, says Bryan Appleyard, to resist, and to reclaim the full
depth of human experience. We are, he argues, naturally complex
creatures, we are only ever at home in complexity. Through art and
literature we see ourselves in ways that machines never can. He
makes an impassioned plea for the voices of art to be heard before
those of the technocrats. Part memoir, part reportage, part
cultural analysis, THE BRAIN IS WIDER THAN THE SKY is a dire
warning about what we may become and a lyrical evocation of what
humans can be. For the brain is indeed wider than the sky.
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