Editorial Review:
From Ptolemy's projection of the world--still the basic map after 13 centuries--to Tolkien's cartography of Middle Earth (the most printed guide to a non-existent place ever), each of these maps has its own fascinating story to tell.
Escape maps, military maps, cartographic breakthroughs, and follies and forgeries: these 100 maps, organized chronologically, are the most important, dramatic, and breathtakingly beautiful ever created. They show not only the art and science of the form, but also its power. Some had devastating consequences, such the 1885 map of Africa that carved up the continent to Europeans desires. But others are simply exquisite to look at or mysterious, like the Aborginal "Dreamtime" painting and the Siberian rock maps. And some maps capture places that exist only in the imagination. Finding out about each one is an adventure all its own, whether it be with Lewis and Clark across America or the British as they uncovered India.
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Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: 
not as well edited as I'd like 2006-05-20 I was disappointed with this book. Certainly it contains many nice maps, but even the potential inherent in its large square size has been squandered.
The very first map inside the book [of the Soviet Union] is neither explained well nor presented in a comprehensible way. It's not especially handsome. Even the authors express surprise that they included it, and their purported explanation for including it [Stalin killed kulaks] is kinda stupefying.
Then there is the lousy proofreading. I just have to scratch my head in amazement when the very second word of text (after the introduction) is misspelled: "As Pofessor Black has pointed out..." Ouch!
I would recommend instead The Image of the World: 20 Centuries of World Maps. That Pomegranite book is everything this is not -- focussed, handsomely presented and well-edited. True, Whitfield deals only with a subset of cartography (the Map of the World) but an important and wide-ranging subset indeed. In any event, this book overreaches in pompously presenting itself as an overview of the "Science, Art and Politics of Cartography Throughout History" --presumably, history recorded and not!
Designed for the coffee table, "100 Maps" won't fit on your shelf, and you won't want it there in any event. I'm giving mine away.
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