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The Becker Technology Trilogy presents a thumbnail sketch of key
events from the beginning of the Renaissance in Europe to the
amazing air and space technologies of the 21st century. Mixed with
equally startling cultural and political perspectives, events are
presented in three companion volumes. Book 1, Eight Against The
World: Warriors Of The Scientific Revolution, follows the
close-knit lives of eight extraordinary men of science and
technology - Gutenberg, Leonardo, Copernicus, Nostradamus, Brahe,
Galilei, Kepler and Newton to the doorstep of the Industrial
Revolution. These giants of the past, willing to endure
heartbraking hardships, dedicated their lives to building the
foundation of today's technological and scientific achievements.
Book 2, A Season Of Madness: Life and Death In The 1960s, begins
the author's participation in the emergence of new technologies as
an eyewitness to the final two-thirds of the 20th century.
Incredible events come to life as the background of the cultural
disorders of the Civil Rights Movement, Cuban Missile Crisis, the
Space Race for the Moon, 1967 Detroit Riot, and the Kent State
University Massacre. Book 3, The Race For Technology: Conquering
The High Frontier is an explanation of major science and technology
events from about 1970 to the start of the 21st century. Global
miracles of invention such as the Hubble Space Telescope, the
Assault On Mars, Thames River Flood Barrier and Netherlands
Ijsselmeer Project, satellites searching for the Chernobyl
Disaster, the Armada To Halley's Comet, and the changing nature of
hurricanes on our doorstep, are highlighted in terms of everyday
cultural technology. The Trilogy is being published in 2007 and
2008- three must-read, exciting books you need to have on your own
bookshelf to be alive and well in the 21st century.
YOU ARE THERE - right in the middle of the1960s - a shocking decade
of the '67 Detroit Riot, assassinations, the Cold War, U2 spy
photos of the Cuban Missile Crisis and threat of nuclear
annihilation, the massacre of students at Kent State University,
first to Mars and first men to the moon - and much more. You will
see and read about events through the eyewitness accounts of the
author as he is forced into one unnerving incident after another in
a decade of unprecedented uncertainty, violence and terror that
gripped America in this amazing ten years right out of the
newspaper headlines. From V2 rockets over London to the frustration
of the Fight For Berlin and the murders of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. and Robert Kennedy, you will not believe how close our nation
came to certain disaster. This richly-illustrated second book in
the Technology Trilogy (1st book is Eight Against The World about
science genuises of the Renaissance) by a highly experienced writer
takes you back to the America of the 1960s for a fast-paced focus
on the outstanding events of a decade of cultural and Cold War
confusion. Basking in the prosperity of new products for the home,
Americans were not prepared for the shock of the Soviet Sputnik in
1957 that threw government and the American people into a panic. As
our culture was turned upside down, we entered a period of
near-anarchy made worse with the threat of nuclear war coming from
the Soviet Union and Cuba. Revolutions in music by Elvis and the
Beatles, and a younger generation rebellion prompted by "the bomb,"
we began a 20-year period of social chaos that weakened our basic
cultural values. This book shows how close we came to calamity in
the 1960s and 1970s.
This third book in the Technology Trilogy describes the development
of several emerging technologies from 1970 to the start of the 3rd
millennium written to explain the human side of science and
technology. Against a background of world space exploration, the
Cold War, U.S. defense systems, European Space Agency imaging of
Halley's Comet, search for the Soviet nuclear explosion at
Chernobyl, Russia's crash space programs, and the runaway 1995
Hurricane Season, these three decades kept our nation alerted to
communist aggressions. Once again you are there through the
author's eyewitness experiences in one adventure after another -
from the continued assault on Mars to an in-flight refueling of a
B52 bomber and the technology education of gifted young people.
While each chapter stands on its own merit, each presents a
separate view of the entire picture of the last quarter of the 20th
century. If you remember the 20th century, or if you want to gain a
glimpse of world events at the end of the century, you will want to
read this exciting book.
The Becker Technology Trilogy presents a thumbnail sketch of key
events from the beginning of the Renaissance in Europe to the
amazing air and space technologies of the 21st century. Mixed with
equally startling cultural and political perspectives, events are
presented in three companion volumes. Book 1, Eight Against The
World: Warriors Of The Scientific Revolution, follows the
close-knit lives of eight extraordinary men of science and
technology - Gutenberg, Leonardo, Copernicus, Nostradamus, Brahe,
Galilei, Kepler and Newton to the doorstep of the Industrial
Revolution. These giants of the past, willing to endure
heartbraking hardships, dedicated their lives to building the
foundation of today's technological and scientific achievements.
Book 2, A Season Of Madness: Life and Death In The 1960s, begins
the author's participation in the emergence of new technologies as
an eyewitness to the final two-thirds of the 20th century.
Incredible events come to life as the background of the cultural
disorders of the Civil Rights Movement, Cuban Missile Crisis, the
Space Race for the Moon, 1967 Detroit Riot, and the Kent State
University Massacre. Book 3, The Race For Technology: Conquering
The High Frontier is an explanation of major science and technology
events from about 1970 to the start of the 21st century. Global
miracles of invention such as the Hubble Space Telescope, the
Assault On Mars, Thames River Flood Barrier and Netherlands
Ijsselmeer Project, satellites searching for the Chernobyl
Disaster, the Armada To Halley's Comet, and the changing nature of
hurricanes on our doorstep, are highlighted in terms of everyday
cultural technology. The Trilogy is being published in 2007 and
2008 - three must-read, exciting books you need to have on your own
bookshelf to be alive and well in the 21st century.
YOU ARE THERE - right in the middle of the1960s - a shocking decade
of the '67 Detroit Riot, assassinations, the Cold War, U2 spy
photos of the Cuban Missile Crisis and threat of nuclear
annihilation, the massacre of students at Kent State University,
first to Mars and first men to the moon - and much more. You will
see and read about events through the eyewitness accounts of the
author as he is forced into one unnerving incident after another in
a decade of unprecedented uncertainty, violence and terror that
gripped America in this amazing ten years right out of the
newspaper headlines. From V2 rockets over London to the frustration
of the Fight For Berlin and the murders of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. and Robert Kennedy, you will not believe how close our nation
came to certain disaster. This richly-illustrated second book in
the Technology Trilogy (1st book is Eight Against The World about
science genuises of the Renaissance) by a highly experienced writer
takes you back to the America of the 1960s for a fast-paced focus
on the outstanding events of a decade of cultural and Cold War
confusion. Basking in the prosperity of new products for the home,
Americans were not prepared for the shock of the Soviet Sputnik in
1957 that threw government and the American people into a panic. As
our culture was turned upside down, we entered a period of
near-anarchy made worse with the threat of nuclear war coming from
the Soviet Union and Cuba. Revolutions in music by Elvis and the
Beatles, and a younger generation rebellion prompted by "the bomb,"
we began a 20-year period of social chaos that weakened our basic
cultural values. This book shows how close we came to calamity in
the 1960s and 1970s.
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