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Loading... Wings of Madness: Alberto Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flightby Paul Hoffman
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. The fascinating, tragic life of the Brazilian aeronaut Santos-Dumont should make for a great biography. Hoffman seems out of his depth in this weak attempt, however. ( )By the time I got around to reading this book, I'll admit that I was wondering if it was a redundant exercise in the wake of seeing the PBS documentary based on Hoffman's work. Such is not the case. While the TV program plays up the technological successes in Santo-Dumont's career the book is more of a life, and deals quite forthrightly with the issues relating to the man's life-style, sexuality, and the question of just when Santos-Dumont's "madness" began to assert itself. Hoffman also goes further in the book in terms of placing the achievements of Santos-Dumont in the context of the technological fervor of the time, and the activities of his fellow aviation pioneers. A bit character in Dawn over Kitty Hawk, Santos-Dumont is the subject of this lively biography about a wealthy and eccentric Brazilian expatriate in Paris who made many innovations in lighter-than-air powered flight at about the same time the Wright Brothers were cracking the heavier-than-air problem. [draft] [final newsletter blurbs forwarded to Booksense who used it for Sept./Oct. BS76 flyer] A vida de Santos Dumont no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)
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