New Zealand Listener - May 26, 2018

(Jeff_L) #1

MAY 26 2018 LISTENER


NEW


ZEALAND


YMPHONY


RCHESTRA


SO


FOR TICKET DETAILS VISIT
NZSO.CO.NZ

AUCKLAND SAT 9 JUN
TOWN HALL 7.30PM

CHRISTCHURCH WED 13 JUN
ISAAC THEATRE ROYAL 7.00PM

DUNEDIN THU 14 JUN
TOWN HALL 7.00PM

WELLINGTON SAT 16 JUN
MICHAEL FOWLER CENTRE 7.30PM

HAMILTON FRI 8 JUN
CLAUDELANDS ARENA 7.30PM

PRINCIPAL PARTNERS:

LAWRENCE RENES CONDUCTOR
SIMON O’NEILL TENOR

IN ASSOCIATION WITH:

WAGNER
WESENDONCK LIEDER
BRUCKNER
SYMPHONY NO. 4 IN E FLAT MAJOR

AN


EVENING


WITH


SIMON


O’NEILL


PRESENTS


SO MEMORABLE


Wonderland one).


In Exactly, he makes a brief dip into


the ancient world with a story about the


Antikythera mechanism, a first-century


BC orrery that can reasonably lay claim to


being the earliest analogue computer. But


the substance of the story begins in the


late 18th century with John Wilkinson,


who invented a machine that bored a


precise hole through a solid block of iron


and made a cylinder that stopped Watt’s


steam engine from leaking pressure. (It’s


one of the delightful circularities of the


story that the steam engine and that laser


interferometer are both based on cylinders:


one is accurate to within a 10th of an inch;


the other to 10-35 of an inch.)


Winchester tells the stories of, among


others, Henry Maudslay (perfectly flat


surfaces), Joseph Whitworth (standardised


screws) and two very different car-making


enterprises started by men called Henry


(Royce and Ford). Each new phase of


development is anchored by an engrossing
yarn, and highly technical detail is made
intelligible and entertaining.
There are irritations: many footnotes
include material that would have fitted
well in the main text; illustrations are few
and of poor quality; and although this
is an English edition (the US title is The
Perfectionists), it adopts American spellings,
most grievously erasing the distinction
between the suffixes “-metre” (a unit
of measure) and “-meter” (a measuring
instrument). This last is regrettable in a
book dedicated to the
concept of precision,
but it delivers many
joys to compensate. l
EXACTLY: How Precision
Engineers Created
the Modern World,
by Simon Winchester
(William Collins, NZ rep
HarperCollins, $36)

Odd man out: Louis Pasteur doesn’t rate a
mention; Louis XV; Charles de Gaulle entering
Paris.

Surprising because, though the case


could possibly have been made in the


preceding 358 pages, Norwich doesn’t


make it. Racine, Molière and Corneille


are dismissed in one sentence; Balzac,


Flaubert and Zola are relegated to


footnotes. As for great scientists and
explorers like Lavoisier, Pasteur and
Dumont d’Urville? Well, mes amis, they
don’t even rate a mention. There are,
however, numerous pages about Louis
XV’s many mistresses (indeed there is
spicy stuff about the mistresses of nearly
every king or president), along with
numerous battles and plentiful bloodshed.
France is full of action and larger-than-
life characters, from Charlemagne to
Joan of Arc, Louis XIV to Robespierre,
Napoleon to the Paris Commune and
Verdun to Vichy France.
This book is very much like Simon
Sebag Montefiore’s Jerusalem: The
Biography, or Matthew Kneale’s recent
Rome: A History in Seven Sackings. It is great
fun to read, superficial in most respects
and determined to tell an engaging tale.
Norwich at least scores
points for eccentricity
in nominating the
bourgeois King Louis
Philippe as France’s
wisest ruler. l
FRANCE: A History From
Gaul To De Gaulle, by
John Julius Norwich
(Hachette, $37.99)

There are numerous


pages about Louis XV’s


many mistresses, along


with numerous battles


and plentiful bloodshed.

Free download pdf