The Martians Audiolibro Por David Baron arte de portada

The Martians

The True Story of an Alien Craze That Captured Turn-of-the-Century America

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The Martians

De: David Baron
Narrado por: Rob Greenbaum
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In the early 1900s, many Americans actually believed we had discovered intelligent life on Mars, as bestselling science writer David Baron chronicles in The Martians, his truly bizarre tale of a nation swept up in Mars mania.

At the center of Baron's historical drama is Percival Lowell, the Boston Brahmin and Harvard scion, who observed "canals" etched into the surface of Mars. Lowell devised a grand theory that the red planet was home to a utopian society that had built gargantuan ditches to funnel precious meltwater from the polar icecaps to desert farms and oasis cities. The public fell in love with the ambitious amateur astronomer who shared his findings in speeches and wildly popular books.

While at first people treated the Martians whimsically―Martians headlining Broadway shows, biologists speculating whether they were winged or gilled―the discussion quickly became serious. Inventor Nikola Tesla announced he had received radio signals from Mars; Alexander Graham Bell agreed there was "no escape from the conviction" that intelligent beings inhabited the planet. Martian excitement reached its zenith when Lowell financed an expedition to photograph Mars from Chile's Atacama Desert, resulting in what newspapers hailed as proof of the Martian canals' existence.

©2025 David Baron (P)2025 Highbridge Audio
Américas Antropología Ciencia Estados Unidos Sistema solar Marte
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This book focuses on an interesting topic (the widespread belief circa 1900 that Mars was inhabited by intelligent, human-like life) and an intriguing, if arrogant and intellectually flawed, individual--Percival Lowell (1855-1916). What detracts significantly from this book is the narrator, specifically his attempts at various accents (French, German, Italian, British), which are pretty dreadful (his narration is otherwise fine). Perhaps somebody thought that these accents would make the narration more dramatic (maybe akin to the radio broadcast of "War of the Worlds"?), but--at least for this listener--they were very distracting.

Good Book, Poor Narration

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