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Nothing Like It In the World : The Men Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869 by Stephen E. Ambrose
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Nothing Like It In the World : The Men Who Built the Transcontinental…

by Stephen E. Ambrose

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1,036143,745 (3.69)4
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Fascinating history of the planning and building of the trancontinental railroad. This excellent history focuses on both termini of the railroad and the race to lay the most track before ultimately joining in Promontory, Utah. Politics, finance, fraud and intrigue permeate this book by Stephen Ambrose, a master history writer. ( )
  santhony | Jan 25, 2009 |
Tedious, disjointed and boring. Could have been a great story. Also an irritating (because he clearly doesn't under stand) explanation of financing of railroads. Could have focused on a lot of the aspects of building the road, but chose the most boring aspect-the actual construction. Like reading an account of carpenters who built your house.
  jmcilree | Nov 9, 2008 |
Slogging through this book turned into a tedious process for me, picking it up and setting it back down over a period of several months in which I finished a number of much more stimulating texts. I'm highly interested in the subject, but I just didn't find Ambrose's prose to be very compelling. ( )
1 vote jaygheiser | Oct 5, 2008 |
9.0
  Listener42 | Sep 1, 2008 |
3479. Nothin Like It in the World: The Men Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869, by Stephen E. Ambrose (27 Aug 2001) This is a fun book to read despite Ambrose's gee-whiz, triumphalistic attitutde--or maybe because of it. It is quite a story and Ambrose tells it in a way which is not a bad way to tell it. ( )
  Schmerguls | Jul 25, 2008 |
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Next to winning the Civil War and abolishing slavery, building the first transcontinental railroad, from Omaha, Nebraska, to Sacramento, California, was the greatest achievement of the American people in the nineteenth century.
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0743203178, Paperback)

Abraham Lincoln, who had worked as a riverboat pilot before turning to politics, knew a thing or two about the problems of transporting goods and people from place to place. He was also convinced that the United States would flourish only if its far-flung regions were linked, replacing sectional loyalties with an overarching sense of national destiny.

Building a transcontinental railroad, writes the prolific historian Stephen Ambrose, was second only to the abolition of slavery on Lincoln's presidential agenda. Through an ambitious program of land grants and low-interest government loans, he encouraged entrepreneurs such as California's "Big Four"--Charles Crocker, Collis Huntington, Mark Hopkins, and Leland Stanford--to take on the task of stringing steel rails from ocean to ocean. The real work of doing so, of course, was on the shoulders of immigrant men and women, mostly Chinese and Irish. These often-overlooked actors and what a contemporary called their "dreadful vitality" figure prominently in Ambrose's narrative, alongside the great financiers and surveyors who populate the standard textbooks.

In the end, Ambrose writes, Lincoln's dream transformed the nation, marking "the first great triumph over time and space" and inaugurating what has come to be known as the American Century. David Haward Bain's Empire Express, which covers the same ground, is more substantial, but Ambrose provides an eminently readable study of a complex episode in American history. --Gregory McNamee

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:56 -0400)

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