Inventions Of The Great War
Alexander Russell Bond
Read by David Wales
“… this war was not one of mere destruction. It set men to thinking as they had never thought before. It intensified their inventive faculties, and as a result, the world is richer in many ways. Lessons of thrift and economy have been taught us. Manufacturers have learned the value of standardization. The business man has gained an appreciation of scientific research. The whole story is too big to be contained within the covers of a single book, but I have selected the more important and interesting inventions and have endeavored to describe them in simple language for the benefit of the reader who is not technically trained.” Bond was the sometime editor of Scientific American magazine.
( Book Preface, David Wales) (6 hr 40 min)
Chapters
Preface | 5:27 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 1 The War In And Under The Ground | 19:08 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 2 Hand-Grenades And Trench Mortars | 21:38 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 3 Guns That Fire Themselves | 25:17 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 4 Guns And Super-Guns | 30:18 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 5 The Battle Of The Chemists | 26:59 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 6 Tanks | 20:04 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 7 The War In The Air | 30:29 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 8 Ships That Sail The Skies | 26:04 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 9 Getting The Range | 19:05 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 10 Talking In The Sky | 28:14 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 11 Warriors Of The Paint-Brush | 25:53 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 12 Submarines | 23:02 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 13 Getting The Best Of The U-Boat | 25:28 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 14 "Devil's Eggs" | 24:41 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 15 Surface Boats | 14:02 | Read by David Wales |
Chapter 16 Reclaiming The Victims Of Submarines | 34:30 | Read by David Wales |
Reviews
Great!
Alan H.
Extremely interesting and expertly narrated. I'm not a war or history buff.
Fantastic accumulation of technical knowledge of ww1
NEJA
Very clear and understandable description of all technical aspects of ww1 including a summary of reasons why they worked and why they were needed. There is quiet some patriotism and a tendency to emphasize the superiority of the allies which would not be acceptable for a contemporary work but understandable and almost sensible for 1919
The imagination, Invention, and Enginering of the early 20th century
MCM1701
It is awe inspiring when given the circumstances, in this case the Great War, that enabled great inventions from imagination to their specific engineering. This book does a good job bringing to light not only specifics of each engineering marvel and technic, but why and the circumstances that led to each evolution. Very interesting history study.
Jules
really interesting, I learnt a lot. the author did a great job of explaining each subject.
Frank Trigg
Book provides information about WW1 that most of us, including those of us who haves
engineers of war
A LibriVox Listener
It is very interesting how people came up with different techniques.
very good
Art Phelps
makes you proud to be an american!
great listen took a few weeks but worth it
peter