Monturiol's Dream The Extraordinary Story Of The Submarine Inventor Who Wanted To Save The World

Author: Matthew Stewart

Stock information

General Fields

  • : $24.00 AUD
  • : 9780375414398
  • : Pantheon Books
  • : Pantheon Books
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  • : 0.616432
  • : June 2003
  • : 1.23 Inches X 5.99 Inches X 9.3 Inches
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  • : 0.0
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  • : books

Special Fields

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  • : Matthew Stewart
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  • : Hardback
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  • : 623.8/12045/092 B
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  • : 352
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Barcode 9780375414398
9780375414398

Local Description

2003. First edition, first printing. A fine, unmarked copy in a near fine, unclipped d/w which is only marked by a price sticker to the front panel.

Description

"This is the story of the strange and noble life - and dream - of nineteenth-century utopian social revolutionary and self-taught engineer Narcis Monturiol, who invented the world's first fully operational steam-powered submarine, not as a weapon of war but as a means of saving human life and spreading democracy." "Matthew Stewart tells the story of Monturiol from his childhood to his years living the dangerous life of a revolutionary. We see him at the bloody barricades and fleeing - one step ahead of the Barcelona police - to the remote coastline of northern Catalonia. On that shore, watching teams of divers risk their lives gathering coral from the water's depths for use in the making of jewels, candelabras, and crimson pigment, he finds the true purpose of his life. He saves a man presumed dead from drowning and conceives of a craft that will protect the divers who harvest coral - a safe, hermetically sealed underwater vessel that will make the ocean's bounty available to the common man." "Stewart writes about the building of Monturiol's submarine: how, without scientific education (he was a lawyer by training), Monturiol read books on physics, chemistry, and biology; how he launched a hand-powered prototype submarine capable of reaching depths of sixty feet; how his efforts to gain government support for building a larger submarine were thwarted (his invention was dismissed by one official as having "no useful applications"). We see Monturiol, unwilling to give up on his dream, turn to the artists, poets, and musicians of Barcelona to help him mobilize the public to fund his project, and how he launched his second, much larger vessel five years later: the most advanced submarine of its day; at more than fifty feet long it displaced seventy-two tons and navigated reliably at depths of up to one hundred feet, with a unique system for eliminating carbon dioxide, replenishing oxygen in the interior cabin, and enabling its crew to remain underwater indefinitely. It had a steam engine for propulsion, a chemical furnace to heat the engine as it generated oxygen for the crew, external lights, portholes, and pincers for harvesting coral and other objects from the deep. It was the first true submarine; the world would not see its equal for another twenty years." "And we watch as Monturiol's revolutionary friends, making use of his utopian ideals and notions of urban planning (a term he originated), forge a new culture for Catalonia and its capital city and create the radical design that resulted in an entirely new Barcelona."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved