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Lost to Time

Unforgettable Stories That History Forgot

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"A splendid book, full of fascinating, well-told tales . . . a diverse and bafflingly overlooked collection of historical curiosities" (Booklist, starred review).
"The only thing new in the world," said Harry S. Truman, "is the history you don't know." In this fresh and fascinating collection of historical vignettes, National Book Award–winning author Martin W. Sandler restores to memory important events, people, and developments that have been lost to time. 
Though barely known today, these are major historical stories, from Ziryab, an eighth-century black slave whose influence on music, cuisine, fashion, and manners still reverberates, to Cahokia, a twelfth-century city north of the Rio Grande, which at its zenith contained a population estimated to have been as high as 40,000 (more than any contemporary European city), to the worst peacetime maritime disaster ever, the explosion and sinking of the Sultana on the Mississippi in 1865.
These tales are far from trivia; they illuminate little-known American and foreign achievements, ingenuity, heroics, blunders, and tragedies that changed the course of history and resonate today.
"A very compelling collection of accounts about things not even mentioned in textbooks . . . People who love to read history will enjoy [Lost to Time]." —Digital Journal
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    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2010
      Such a splendid book, full of fascinating, well-told tales. Heres the Sultana, a 260-foot steamboat that sank in 1865 with a death toll higher than that of the Titanic. Heres Americas first subway, constructed in New York under utmost security in 1870, more than 30 years before the current subway system opened. Heres Exercise Tiger, a rehearsal for the 1944 D-Day invasion of Normandy that, believe it or not, led to more deaths than the actual Utah Beach attack. Heres Gustave Whitehead (born Gustav Weisskopf), a German immigrant who piloted a powered aircraft a full two years before the Wright brothers. And thats just a taste of this eye-opening book. Historian Sandler has assembled a diverse and bafflingly overlooked collection of historical curiosities, forcing us to wonder how its possible that we never learned this stuff in school? In some cases, there are explanations: the Sultana sinking, for example, was overshadowed in the press by the aftermath of Lincolns assassination 13 days earlier, and the Exercise Tiger debacle was covered up for decades. But in other cases were just left scratching our heads, wondering how these remarkable moments in history were allowed to slip through the cracks of time.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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