The Things We Make

The Unknown History of Invention from Cathedrals to Soda Cans

No cover

Bill Hammack: The Things We Make (Paperback, 2024, Sourcebooks)

Paperback, 272 pages

Published Jan. 16, 2024 by Sourcebooks.

ISBN:
978-1-7282-8045-5
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (1 review)

3 editions

Engineering, the real stories

4 stars

I'm a big fan of Edward Petroski's books on engineering, and this is in the same vein, peeling away the simplistic lone inventor eureka stories created by media, marketing, and yes education (in high school I participated in a "gifted" program where they told us how inspiration came in dreams and we ran around smashing ice to see who could make water first) to show the far more complex and nonlinear paths to creating things that work. The final few chapters illustrate that forcefully, using the light bulb (Edison gets all the credit, but everyone should know about Lewis Latimer) and microwave oven (the candy bar story is a hoax) as examples. Another point that the author is attempting to make is that engineering is not just applied science, which is where the book starts off describing how the ancients could construct huge pyramids and arches and domes without all …