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Jim McGill December 15th 05 04:26 PM

Cool Book - "Infrastructure" by Hayes
 
Hi All

I've been reading a very cool and fun library book recently.
"Infrastructure, a Field Guide to the Industrial Landscape" by Brian
Hayes. I actually picked it up because it has a lot of great photos, but
the text is very well written and full of interesting stuff.

Hayes is an excellent science / engineering writer in the John McPhee
mode. He's always been interested in all those big odd structures you
see when you are driving around or flying over and wanted to get inside
them and see what they really did. So he wrote this book, mostly as an
excuse to do so.

It has a lot of great pictures and very well written text. He starts
with mining and water, works his way through power plants to
transportation and ends with recycling. He writes with both eloquence
and enthusiasm.

He really approaches the project like a field guide to birds or geology,
telling you what to look for from the outside, and what that means on
the inside. He's particularly good at showing how the historical context
sometimes plays out with huge consequences in modern industry.
Definitely a fun read, though not light, it's 500 pages of glossy paper
and 10"x10.5" with a hard cover so it's a pretty hefty lap full.

Check it out (pun intended, though at $50 a copy it's also good advice)

Jim

Grant Erwin December 15th 05 04:47 PM

Cool Book - "Infrastructure" by Hayes
 
Jim McGill wrote:
Hi All

I've been reading a very cool and fun library book recently.
"Infrastructure, a Field Guide to the Industrial Landscape" by Brian
Hayes. I actually picked it up because it has a lot of great photos, but
the text is very well written and full of interesting stuff.

Hayes is an excellent science / engineering writer in the John McPhee
mode. He's always been interested in all those big odd structures you
see when you are driving around or flying over and wanted to get inside
them and see what they really did. So he wrote this book, mostly as an
excuse to do so.

It has a lot of great pictures and very well written text. He starts
with mining and water, works his way through power plants to
transportation and ends with recycling. He writes with both eloquence
and enthusiasm.

He really approaches the project like a field guide to birds or geology,
telling you what to look for from the outside, and what that means on
the inside. He's particularly good at showing how the historical context
sometimes plays out with huge consequences in modern industry.
Definitely a fun read, though not light, it's 500 pages of glossy paper
and 10"x10.5" with a hard cover so it's a pretty hefty lap full.

Check it out (pun intended, though at $50 a copy it's also good advice)

Jim



My library has it, so I put it on reserve. It only costs $50 if you buy it!

GWE


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