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Glass:: From The First Mirror To Fiber Optics, The Story Of The Substance That Changed The World
Glass:: From The First Mirror To Fiber Optics, The Story Of The Substance That Changed The World

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Author: William S. Ellis
Publisher: Harper Perennial
Category: Book

List Price: $14.00
Buy Used: $4.11
You Save: $9.89 (71%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 1325400

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 328
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.3 x 0.9

ISBN: 0380791390
Dewey Decimal Number: 666.1
EAN: 9780380791392

Publication Date: August 1, 1999
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Highlighting present.Ships within hours from Charleston, SC. Established seller with nearly 10 years of online history.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Glass:: From The First Mirror To Fiber Optics, The Story Of The Substance That Changed The World
  • School & Library Binding - Glass: From the First Mirror to Fiber Optics

Similar Items:

  • Glass: A World History
  • Introduction to Glass Science and Technology (Rcs Paperbacks Series)
  • Glass Throughout Time: The History and Technology of Glassmaking from the Ancient World to the Present
  • Mirror, Mirror: A History Of The Human Love Affair With Reflection
  • Warm Glass: A Complete Guide to Kiln-Forming Techniques: Fusing, Slumping, Casting

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
It is the neon sign that blinks on the edge of our consciousness; the wavy, delicate windowpanes in a centuries-old farmhouse; the airy adornment of high-rise architects and playful distraction of daydreaming schoolchildren. Heat resistant or shatterproof, tempered or stained, this magical substance formed of sand and fire has done much more than brighten and beautify: it has changed the very way we live.

William S. Ellis brilliantly whisks readers on a marvelously entertaining journey of ingenuity and discovery, from the birthplace of glass on the ancient shores of Phoenicia to the crystal factories of Waterford, which only recently has leapt into the computer age. In prose as crystalline as his subject, the author celebrates the versatility and functionality of glass, and explains how a substance known to all but understood by few has been shaped and molded to serve mankind in innumerable ways. In these pages, readers will learn how glass has both shaped and been shaped by man's changing relationship to the environment; how it has brought vision to the sight-deprived and to human beings huddling in the dark; and how glass enters the twenty-first century yielding an almost unlimited horizon of possibilities.

With grace, charm and authority, Glass delves into history, invention, manufacturing, fine art, and the myriad faces and forms of this protean substance. Whether visiting the flamboyant glass artist Dale Chihuly, dissecting the creation of a twenty-ton telescopic mirror, sampling the history of Tiffany's magnificent lamps, or watching the design and construction of the greenhouses of Kew Gardens, this book treats readers to a multifaceted vision of a material eternally destined to die a violent death, and to be constantly reborn in a relentlessly changing world.




Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Interesting Tidbits Lost in Annoying Metaphors and Jokes   January 5, 2004
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

There are many interesting tidbits in this undisciplined effort at science writing, but excessive use (of often confusing) metaphors and jokes make this annoying to the point of frustration. The topic is fascinating but the writer seems to think his flowery poetry and fine wit contributes to the readability of the book. It does not!

In addition, he has the annoying habit of presenting an interesting concept but in no way explaining the science behind it.

Science writing has, at times, lapsed into sloppy writing laced with excessive poetics and personal observations of no interest to others. On the other hand, David Quammen (as in The Song of the Dodo) has shown us that we should expect and demand tightly written and reasoned science writing.


2 out of 5 stars A Fun Read If You Don't Mind Lots of Misinformation   August 14, 2001
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

The original article by Ellis in the National Geographic was excellent and accurate as well. It seems most unfortunate that the detailed checking of facts that was used there was not applied to this book. Just two examples of many that could have been chosen: Ellis has Nefertiti looking into a glass mirror more than 2000 years before glass mirrors began to replace mirrors made of polished metal (page 9); in discussing fiber optical communication (page 96), he states that amplifiers are needed "to give lift to the light and prevent it from reverting back to electricity..." - of course the light merely weakens from absorption, leakage, and scattering, but always remains light. The color picture of the hanging Cage Cup is printed upside-down. And there are several places where he discusses so-called important break-throughs in fields where the discoverers have then gone on to do other things for various stated reasons. The real reasons were, of course, that these were not break-throughs but either dead ends or only self-advertised claims that did not really work. It is most unfortunate that experts in the field of each of the many and important topics covered were not asked to proof-read it, for then it would have been an excellent and accurate account.


4 out of 5 stars The Tektite Glass Menagerie   February 11, 1999
 5 out of 9 found this review helpful

An excellent book about glass and glass making. The reference to tektites--natural, extraterrestrial glass stones--is all too brief however (and inaccurate in scope). Author William S. Ellis fails to tell the whole story of the on-going--and most certainly unresolved--mystery of tektite origin! Oddly, both sides of the constroversy consider the problem solved. Reading "Glass," one would assume the "impact" side has won the debate. Not true at all! Ellis fails to mention one of the most credible theories of tektite origin: That is, that tektites appear to some geologists and astronomers (and some ceramic scientists)to be extraterrestrial volcanic glass, probably ejected during ancient silicic eruptions on the Moon. Also, the author fails to mention that tektite glass is far too "fined" to have been made in the near-instantaneous force of terrestrial meteorite impacts, as the mainstream "impact" scientists contend. The chemical trends in tektites are clearly igneous, not sedimentary as noted here and stated by the impact people.


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