Description
Book Synopsis"Randel is endlessly fascinating, and Holloway’s biography tells his life with great skill." —Steve Weinberg,
USA TodayTrade Review"Marguerite Holloway has uncovered [in the life of John Randel Jr.] a quite marvelous tale, and has told it just magnificently." -- Simon Winchester, author of The Perfectionists and The Map That Changed the World
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The Measure of Manhattan allows us to appreciate, for the first time, the extent to which the rationality of the grid plan can be attributed to the irrationally obsessive man who ‘affixe[d] the city to the island,’ in Holloway’s words." -- Richard Kreiner - Slate
"A far more intimate experience than going to the museum…Holloway’s relationship to the city is personal, and she is aware that the city itself was made by people, for them to live in." -- Village Voice
"This outstanding history of the Manhattan grid offers us a strange archaeology: part spatial adventure, part technical expedition into the heart of measurement itself, starring teams of nineteenth-century gentlemen striding across the island’s eroded mountains and wild streams, implementing a grid that would soon enough sprout skyscrapers and flatirons, Central Park and Fifth Avenue." -- Geoff Manaugh - BLDGBLOG
"Marguerite Holloway brings to life the man who in a very real way made New York what it is today." -- Elizabeth Kolbert, author of The Sixth Extinction
"Marguerite Holloway’s portrait of the surveyor’s surveyor in his cartography-obsessed time shows us how much the physical city has changed and, most crucially, how much it hasn’t." -- Robert Sullivan, author of My American Revolution and Rats
"As elegant as the maps it celebrates, Marguerite Holloway’s lively biography tells the story of the man who pinned a grid to Manhattan." -- Edward Dolnick, author of The Clockwork Universe
"An enchanting web of biography and science, as magical as the grid that John Randel devised to give birth to modern Manhattan." -- Andro Linklater, author of Measuring America