
Gerald Carson (1899–1989)
Author of The Social History of Bourbon
About the Author
Gerald Carson (1899-1989) was the author of several books of social history.
Works by Gerald Carson
One for a Man, Two for a Horse: A Pictorial History, Grave and Comic, of Patent Medicines (1961) 21 copies
The polite Americans; a wide-angle view of our more or less good manners over 300 years (1980) 10 copies, 1 review
One for Man, Two for a Horse 1 copy
Associated Works
A Sense of History: The Best Writing from the Pages of American Heritage (1985) — Contributor — 490 copies, 4 reviews
The American Heritage Cookbook and Illustrated History of American Eating & Drinking Part 1 — Contributor — 9 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Carson, Gerald Hewes
- Birthdate
- 1899
- Date of death
- 1989-12-04
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Illinois (BA, MA)
- Occupations
- historian
advertising copywriter - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Carrollton, Illinois, USA
- Place of death
- Langhorne, Pennsylvania, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Being a life-and-times of packaged cereal pioneers Charley Post and the Kellogg brothers, who made Battle Creek, Michigan into home base for the emergence of mass-market cereal manufacturing and marketing at the turn of the last century. The story is told against the backdrop of the nineteenth century's quirky pseudoscientific health fads, such as the utility of eliminating sexual desire through vegetarianism, phrenology, hydrotherapy, and the elder Kellogg's gigantic sanitarium, whither show more thousands repaired to improve their health. Also highly visible in the narrative are the Kelloggs' ugly feud and the involutions of their Seventh Day Adventist denomination's infighting.
This is a lot of ground to cover, and the book ultimately falls of its own weight. It's at its best when it paints with broad strokes and tongue-in-cheek voice the wild claims of the health faddists of those times. However, the narrative is also disjointed, repetitive, and introduces far too much detail on the cereal industry; there are limits to how much one can care about minor variations in the recipes, trademark litigation over brand names which have mostly been extinct for the better part of a century, or how many boxes of cereal can be loaded into one boxcar. show less
This is a lot of ground to cover, and the book ultimately falls of its own weight. It's at its best when it paints with broad strokes and tongue-in-cheek voice the wild claims of the health faddists of those times. However, the narrative is also disjointed, repetitive, and introduces far too much detail on the cereal industry; there are limits to how much one can care about minor variations in the recipes, trademark litigation over brand names which have mostly been extinct for the better part of a century, or how many boxes of cereal can be loaded into one boxcar. show less
Book Description: N Y: William Morrow & Company Inc. 1966. Very Good. in Very Good dj.
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 14
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 186
- Popularity
- #116,757
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 13
- Languages
- 1















