The New York Times headline was no joke. In the early 1900s, many believed intelligent life had been discovered on Mars. The Martians a bizarre tale reconstructed through newly discovered clippings, letters and photographsbegins in the 1890s with Percival Lowell, a Harvard scion who was so certain of his Mars discovery that he (almost) convinced a generation of astronomers that grainy photographs of the red planet revealed meltwater and an intricate canal system, declaring there can be no doubt that living beings inhabit our neighbouring world (The New York Times ).
So frenzied was the reaction that international controversies arose. Tesla announced he had received Martian radio signals, biologists debated whether Martians were winged or gilled and a new genre called science fiction arose. While Lowells claims were debunked, his influence sparked a compulsive interest in Mars and life in outer space that continues to this day.
David Barons American Eclipse was praised as:
"suffused with the peculiar magic and sense of awe that have always attended eclipses, those fraught few minutes when day becomes night, time stands stilland anything seems possible. Hampton Sides, The New York Times best-selling author of Blood and Thunder
Arvustused
"David Barons exuberant book tells the story of a seemingly alien raceAmericans of a century or so agothat, on closer inspection, bears an uncanny resemblance to us today. The rich had gotten fantastically richer, life was unsettled by an array of new technologies, and, in their frustration, people began looking elsewhere for answers." -- Russell Shorto, author of Taking Manhattan
David Baron is an award-winning journalist, broadcaster, and author of The Beast in the Garden and American Eclipse. A former science correspondent for NPR, he has also written for the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, Scientific American, and other publications. David recently served as the Baruch S. Blumberg NASA/Library of Congress Chair in Astrobiology, Exploration, and Scientific Innovation. He lives in Boulder, Colorado.