A review by yetilibrary
The Map that Changed the World: William Smith & the Birth of Modern Geology by Simon Winchester

1.0

I feel bad giving this just one star but this book was outright sedating. I had SO MUCH TROUBLE staying awake while reading it. I kept switching to other books I had in my queue for February but eventually I ran out and had to focus on this one and oh my word I just could not stay focused.

I wonder if I would have enjoyed this more if I were a geologist. I also wonder if I would've enjoyed it more if about 50% of the book--all the digressions, the fluff, the DID YOU KNOW THE BACKSTORY OF THIS INCREDIBLY MINOR PLAYER? sidebars--was removed. Perhaps other readers find it charming and whimsical, but I just found it frustrating and dull. This is about William Smith and his awesome map(s), I want to learn about THAT! I want to learn about geology! I don't care about the time you found a neat-looking rock!

Also, the author clearly has an "I HEART WILLIAM SMITH" bumper sticker on his car and every surface in his home. The constant fawning over OMG MY HERO! gets a little old. Yes, he's fantastic, I get it, can you settle down?

Final complaint: I would have liked more maps and diagrams. Maybe it's because I'm a huge nerd; maybe it's because I like to visualize things. But when so much discussion is of rock layers and the fossils contained therein, a couple of diagrams (one of which languishes AT THE END, and neither of which is referred to in the text) do not suffice. Charts showing the reader what Smith is finding, at least once per chapter, would help us see what he sees and follow Smith's train of thought. For a book about MAPS it's frustratingly short of visual aids.

In conclusion: a swing and a miss. Blargh.