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How We Got to Now: Six Innovations That Made the Modern World Paperback – Illustrated, September 22, 2015

4.4 out of 5 stars 2,713 ratings

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From the New York Times–bestselling author of Where Good Ideas Come From and Unexpected Life, a new look at the power and legacy of great ideas.

In this illustrated history, Steven Johnson explores the history of innovation over centuries, tracing facets of modern life (refrigeration, clocks, and eyeglass lenses, to name a few) from their creation by hobbyists, amateurs, and entrepreneurs to their unintended historical consequences. Filled with surprising stories of accidental genius and brilliant mistakes—from the French publisher who invented the phonograph before Edison but forgot to include playback, to the Hollywood movie star who helped invent the technology behind Wi-Fi and Bluetooth—How We Got to Now investigates the secret history behind the everyday objects of contemporary life.
 
In his trademark style, Johnson examines unexpected connections between seemingly unrelated fields: how the invention of air-conditioning enabled the largest migration of human beings in the history of the species—to cities such as Dubai or Phoenix, which would otherwise be virtually uninhabitable; how pendulum clocks helped trigger the industrial revolution; and how clean water made it possible to manufacture computer chips. Accompanied by a major six-part television series on PBS, How We Got to Now is the story of collaborative networks building the modern world, written in the provocative, informative, and engaging style that has earned Johnson fans around the globe.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for Steven Johnson

 “A great science writer.” — Bill Clinton, speaking at the Health Matters conference

 “Mr. Johnson, who knows a thing or two about the history of science, is a first-rate storyteller.” — The New York Times

“You’re apt to find yourself exhilarated…Johnson is not composing an etiology of particular inventions, but doing something broader and more imaginative…I particularly like the cultural observations Johnson draws along the way…[he] has a deft and persuasive touch…[a] graceful and compelling book.” — 
The New York Times Book Review

 “Johnson is a polymath. . . .  [It’s] exhilarating to follow his unpredictable trains of thought. To explain why some ideas upend the world, he draws upon many disciplines: chemistry, social history, geography, even ecosystem science.” — Los Angeles Times

“Steven Johnson is a maven of the history of ideas...
How We Got to Now is readable, entertaining, and a challenge to any jaded sensibility that has become inured to the everyday miracles all around us.” — The Guardian

“[Johnson's] point is simple, important and well-timed: During periods of rapid innovation, there is always tumult as citizens try to make sense of it....Johnson is an engaging writer, and he takes very complicated and disparate subjects and makes their evolution understandable.”
  The Washington Post

 “Through a series of elegant books about the history of technological innovation, Steven Johnson has become one of the most persuasive advocates for the role of collaboration in innovation….Mr. Johnson's erudition can be quite gobsmacking.” – The Wall Street Journal

 “An unbelievable book…it’s an innovative way to talk about history.” — Jon Stewart

"What makes this book such a mind-expanding read is Johnson’s ability to appreciate human advancement as a vast network of influence, rather than a simple chain of one invention leading to another, and result is nothing less than a celebration of the human mind." —
The Daily Beast

“Fascinating…it’s an amazing book!” — 
CBS This Morning

 “A full three cheers for Steven Johnson. He is, by no means, the only writer we currently have in our era of technological revolution who devotes himself to innovation, invention and creativity but he is, far and away, the most readable.” — The Buffalo News 

"The reader of How We Got to Now cannot fail to be impressed by human ingenuity, including Johnson’s, in determining these often labyrinthine but staggeringly powerful developments of one thing to the next." —
San Francisco Chronicle

"A rapid but interesting tour of the history behind many of the comforts and technologies that comprise our world." — 
Christian Science Monitor

"
How We Got to Now... offers a fascinating glimpse at how a handful of basic inventions--such as the measurement of time, reliable methods of sanitation, the benefits of competent refrigeration, glassmaking and the faithful reproduction of sound--have evolved, often in surprising ways." — Shelf Awareness 

"[Johnson] writes about science and technology elegantly and accessibly, he evinces an infectious delight in his subject matter...Each chapter is full of strange and fascinating connections." — Barnes and Noble Review

"From the sanitation engineering that literally raised nineteenth-century Chicago to the 23 men who partially invented the light bulb before Thomas Edison, [
How We Got to Now] is a many-layered delight."— Nature Review

“A highly readable and fascinating account of science, invention, accident and genius that gave us the world we live in today.”
—Minneapolis Star Tribune

 

About the Author

Steven Johnson is the bestselling author of eleven books, including Where Good Ideas Come From, Wonderland, and The Ghost Map. He's the host and co-creator of the Emmy-winning PBS/BBC series How We Got To Now, and the host of the podcast American Innovations. He lives in Brooklyn and Marin County, California with his wife and three sons.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Riverhead Books
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 22, 2015
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Reprint
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 320 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1594633932
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1594633935
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.05 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.05 x 0.89 x 9 inches
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 1230L
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 2,713 ratings

About the author

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Steven Johnson
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Steven Johnson is the best-selling author of seven books on the intersection of science, technology and personal experience. His writings have influenced everything from the way political campaigns use the Internet, to cutting-edge ideas in urban planning, to the battle against 21st-century terrorism. In 2010, he was chosen by Prospect magazine as one of the Top Ten Brains of the Digital Future.

His latest book, Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation, was a finalist for the 800CEORead award for best business book of 2010, and was ranked as one of the year’s best books by The Economist. His book The Ghost Map was one of the ten best nonfiction books of 2006 according to Entertainment Weekly. His books have been translated into more than a dozen languages.

Steven has also co-created three influential web sites: the pioneering online magazine FEED, the Webby-Award-winning community site, Plastic.com, and most recently the hyperlocal media site outside.in, which was acquired by AOL in 2011. He serves on the advisory boards of a number of Internet-related companies, including Meetup.com, Betaworks, and Nerve.

Steven is a contributing editor to Wired magazine and is the 2009 Hearst New Media Professional-in-Residence at The Journalism School, Columbia University. He won the Newhouse School fourth annual Mirror Awards for his TIME magazine cover article titled "How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live." Steven has also written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Nation, and many other periodicals. He has appeared on many high-profile television programs, including The Charlie Rose Show, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He lectures widely on technological, scientific, and cultural issues. He blogs at stevenberlinjohnson.com and is @stevenbjohnson on Twitter. He lives in Marin County, California with his wife and three sons.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
2,713 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book to be a fascinating read that explains the staggering effects of inventions on our lives. Moreover, the book features many different stories, and customers appreciate how it connects events and inventions in amazing ways. Additionally, the visual presentation is eye-opening, with one customer noting how it adds color to the history of invention and innovation.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

345 customers mention "Readability"336 positive9 negative

Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a fascinating and brilliant essay that makes each chapter a page-turner.

"This book was so incredibly cool that I nearly posted about it several times while I was in the middle of reading it, because I wanted to share it..." Read more

"...He made it reliable, easy to use, and widely available...." Read more

"...This book is flat out one of the most interesting books I have ever read. It is amazing how simple ideas have given way to technological revolutions...." Read more

"...across each of the six "things" and it makes for a remarkably entertaining and thought provoking book...." Read more

224 customers mention "Insight"215 positive9 negative

Customers find the book insightful and thought-provoking, describing six innovations and their staggering effects on life.

"...further related the development of mirrors to the ability for people to actually see themselves, which seemed to correspond with the rise of laws..." Read more

"...synopsis of events across a half-dozen areas, such as sanitation, lighting, and food preservation...." Read more

"...I am somewhat fixated on knowing a little about a lot. The world is so vast and there is so much information out there...." Read more

"...#34;things" and it makes for a remarkably entertaining and thought provoking book...." Read more

137 customers mention "Interest"137 positive0 negative

Customers find the book fascinating, particularly its detailed history of six key innovations that shaped the modern world, making it a great read for history buffs.

"...he takes a very holistic long time frame approach towards storytelling, and how one set of advancements led to others which led to others, sometimes..." Read more

"...and light --- and demonstrates how each of them has had a transformative impact on history...." Read more

"This is a really fun book and a bit of a wild ride. Steven Johnson traces the history of innovation in six areas that affect our daily lives...." Read more

"...Each chapter is devoted to a special innovation and how it impacted the world and further innovation...." Read more

28 customers mention "Visual style"28 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the visual style of the book, finding it captivating and eye-opening, with one customer noting that each chapter is colorfully illustrated.

"...It’s sorta a history-of-a-few-inventions book, but the approach he takes is beautiful...." Read more

"...How We Got to Now” is a fun, light read. Each chapter is colorfully illustrated and chopped up into several parts, each highlighting a part of the..." Read more

"...In How We Got to Now by Steven Johnson you get a fascinating image of our world...." Read more

"...This book has been a vivid and highly sensory pleasure, and this one somewhat direct experience with a concept you explored opened up an entirely..." Read more

20 customers mention "Connection"20 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate how the book connects events and inventions in a logical and fascinating manner.

"...It’s the unexpected connections and consequences that make the book so enjoyable...." Read more

"...writer, but he is clearly gifted as a researcher and his ability to craft a cohesive, interesting story line around big ideas is really exceptional...." Read more

"...The author ties together in such interesting and cohesive a manner the different ways in which six different inventions or their uses changed or are..." Read more

"...or major characters involved; It bridges gaps and connects events/inventions in amazing ways...." Read more

10 customers mention "Sturdiness"10 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's sturdiness, with multiple reviews noting its good condition, and one customer highlighting its well-crafted construction.

"...He made it reliable, easy to use, and widely available...." Read more

"...Very interesting mix of history, science, engineering, and their political, economic and social ramifications." Read more

"...The material was interesting, but the writing just didn't keep my attention...." Read more

"In good condition, looks clean to me and totally helpful for school" Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2024
    This book was so incredibly cool that I nearly posted about it several times while I was in the middle of reading it, because I wanted to share it so much.

    It’s sorta a history-of-a-few-inventions book, but the approach he takes is beautiful. Instead of focusing on the isolated incidents and exaggerated stories we all know (“Thomas Edison invented the lightbulb.“), he takes a very holistic long time frame approach towards storytelling, and how one set of advancements led to others which led to others, sometimes in seemingly unrelated fields.

    I think it was the first chapter that was on glass, which started off with the fall of Constantinople. That caused several guilds of glassmakers on the coast of Turkey to flee to Venice where they set up shop and would occasionally burn down their neighborhoods. That, in turn, led to the city exiling them to an island just off the coast that they could burn down as much as they wanted to. This concentration of people led to several advancements, including the initial development of truly clear glass (previously glass was opaque or translucent, at best). Translucent glass was a game changer, leading directly to the development of mirrors. He further related the development of mirrors to the ability for people to actually see themselves, which seemed to correspond with the rise of laws benefiting the individual as opposed to the group/family/town. People literally didn’t have as strong a concept of “self” before mirrors.

    Around the same time, Gutenberg developed the printing press, leading to the first mass market availability of books. Know what else happened at the same time? Everyone discovered we were all far sighted. Nobody really needed excellent up-close vision to that point in time, but once people were reading it became critical. Fortunately, those Venetian glass merchants were developing lenses as well, which were able to correct vision and let people read. And what happens if you stack two of these brand new lenses on top of each other? Why, you end up with microscopes to show us what small biological structures and cells look like, as well as telescopes to see what the largest things in space are like.

    And on and on and on. 6 chapters of this. Nearly the entire book is not about some brilliant individual inventor, but it’s showing how invention is almost always tightly interwoven. How people literally cannot invent certain things until certain other advancements come about and once they do then huge numbers of people basically get in a race to create something from it.

    The exception was the concluding chapter, The Time Travelers, mostly talking about people that conceived of devices that they truly couldn’t create yet. Da Vinci and his helicopter drawings were briefly touched upon, but it was mostly about Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace and their work on the Analytical Engine, basically a steampunk computer. What I was most impressed with were some of the excerpt’s from Ada Lovelace’s letters - I knew that she was considered to be the world’s first programmer and fairly smart (though most of the stuff I’ve read tends to disparage her as more working under the supervision of Babbage and that hey probably drove things). And the truth is she was absolutely not. Her letters show that she was the one to realize that the Engine wasn’t just a device for doing numeric calculations, but any abstract algebraic or symbolic computation. Basically the concept of a general purpose computer. Now, Babbage was not well regarded for this machine since it didn’t quite work right (his earlier simpler calculators were better received), but neither he nor his few supporters ever made a leap like Ada did. And then most of the work was essentially lost for a century and basically conceived independently by Turing in the ’40s. Ada was way ahead of her time.

    Anyway, it is a phenomenal book and my summations here do not do it justice. Highly recommended.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2018
    The modern American home is a veritable wonderland of technical innovations: clean water on demand, central heating and air conditioning, wireless Internet and telephony, flat screen electronics, and inexpensive lighting, to name just a few. “How We Got to Now: Six Innovations That Made the Modern World” by popular science writer Steven Johnson describes, at a high level, how that wonderland came together over the centuries.

    It is important to note that “How We Got to Now” does not explore six discrete technical innovations. Rather, Johnson provides a basic synopsis of events across a half-dozen areas, such as sanitation, lighting, and food preservation. Early on, he introduces a fascinating concept: the hummingbird effect. Put simply, an innovation, or cluster of innovations, in one field that ends up triggering major changes in a different domain altogether. He coins the term from the sexual reproduction strategies of plants (e.g. flowers supplemented pollen with even more energy-rich nectar to attract insects) that ended up shaping the design of a hummingbird’s wings (i.e. evolving an extremely unusual form of flight mechanics enabling them to hover). The best example, in my opinion, is how the Gutenberg press generated a demand for eyeglasses that led to a broader experimentation with glass lens that led to the microscope and the subsequent discovery of microscopic cells. Or how the advent of air-conditioning had a “long zoom” impact on American politics. Or how the development of sonar to listen to sound waves bouncing off icebergs led, a few generations later, to ultrasound and the abortion of tens of millions of female fetuses in China and India.

    The content of each chapter is relatively superficial but peppered with fascinating personal anecdotes about the discovery of important insights or commercialization of technical innovations. Here are some of my favorites.

    In the early 1900s, Clarence Birdseye was living in the frozen land of Labrador, Canada. He discovered that trout caught while ice fishing, which froze solid almost instantly in the minus 20-degree temperature of the Canadian winter, retained their flavor when later defrosted. Thus, the value of “flash freezing” was discovered and today we still enjoy “Birdseye” frozen peas for dinner.

    In 1908, New Jersey doctor John Leal surreptitiously added chlorine to the public water reservoirs for Jersey City. His patent- and licensing-free discovery of a simple way to provide clean drinking water may be one of the greatest public health contributions in history. A recent study found that chlorinated water reduced the total mortality in the average American city from diseases like dysentery and cholera by 43% and reduced infant mortality by as much as 74%.

    In the 1850s, Aaron Dennison, “the Lunatic of Boston,” mass-produced an inexpensive ($3.50) pocket watch, branded the “Wm. Ellery,” that was “the must-have consumer gadget of the late nineteenth century,” according to Johnson. Richard Sears, a Minnesota railroad agent, found that he could turn a nice profit selling the watches to other station agents. He partnered with Chicago businessman Alvah Roebuck to produce a mail-order catalog showcasing a range of watch designs, and Sears. Roebuck was born – and so was another example of the hummingbird effect.

    A major theme of the book is that Johnson is deeply suspicious of the “great man theory” and “eureka moment” of invention. Consider the case of electric light. People had been tinkering with incandescent light for more than half-a-century before Thomas Edison’s breakthrough at Menlo Park in 1879. More than ten different inventors had earlier hit upon the same basic formula of a carbon filament suspended in a vacuum. “There was no lightbulb moment in the story of the lightbulb,” Johnson writes. Instead, the lightbulb, like most other technical innovations, was the result of a “slow hunch” that took years, sometimes decades, to germinate and mature. In Johnson’s estimation, “Edison invented the lightbulb the way Steve Jobs invented the MP3 player.” He made it reliable, easy to use, and widely available. If anything, Johnson says, Edison should be remembered for his contribution to the process of innovation, his efforts to collect a cross-disciplinary team to conduct a wide range of related research and development. The “invention” of Edison’s lightbulb was thus mostly about sweating the details and what Johnson calls “a bricolage of small improvements.” He acknowledges that Edison was a “true genius” and “a towering figure in nineteenth century innovation,” but that he should most be revered for his ability to build creative teams: “assembling diverse skills in a work environment that valued experimentation and accepted failure, incentivizing the group with financial rewards that were aligned with the overall success of the organization, and building on ideas that originated elsewhere.”

    “How We Got to Now” is a fun, light read. Each chapter is colorfully illustrated and chopped up into several parts, each highlighting a part of the innovation chain that leads to the modern day. A week on your nightstand is probably all that it will take to enjoy this book.
    9 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2016
    Random knowledge is sort of my thing. I am somewhat fixated on knowing a little about a lot. The world is so vast and there is so much information out there.

    Though we may deem some knowledge as random, no knowledge is truly random when you pull back far enough. Everything is interconnected in some way and many times they are connected in very unexpected ways.

    In How We Got to Now by Steven Johnson you get a fascinating image of our world. The butterfly effect is a popular notion used to describe how one seemingly arbitrary event can have a significant impact across the planet. Johnson, however, uses a more accurate and more powerful notion: the hummingbird effect. As he puts it, we can understand a world with flowers but no hummingbirds, but we cannot comprehend a world with hummingbirds but no flowers. The anatomy of a hummingbird exists because the flower exists, the flower does not depend on the hummingbird.

    Technology is similar to a hummingbird, most technologies could not exist without something else. Ideas for computers, batteries, and engines have been around for ages but without existing technology the ideas had to stay dormant.

    This book is flat out one of the most interesting books I have ever read. It is amazing how simple ideas have given way to technological revolutions. It is amazing to see how much technology has evolved in a matter of two centuries. For millennia light only came in one form: fire. For millennia information only travelled at the speed of a man’s gait. For millennia a man never saw his reflection. Today, that and so much more has changed.

    It is so easy to forget how simple innovations have changed the world, and it is easy to forget how much the world has changed.
    29 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Caio Santolim
    5.0 out of 5 stars Leve e divertido
    Reviewed in Brazil on September 12, 2019
    Nesse livro Steven Johnson conta de forma simples e despretensiosa como algumas tecnologias, que consideramos banais hoje em dia, foram desenvolvidas e mudaram o rumo da humanidade ex. Indústria do frio, Luz, Medição do Tempo.
    Report
  • Gabriel Stein
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 13, 2023
    A fascinating book, that explains six of the most important innovations in human history, how they came about, what they mean and, in some cases, how they fit together. An excellent read.
  • George Poirier
    5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting and Original
    Reviewed in Canada on November 19, 2014
    Most books that I’ve read about past inventions and developing technologies pertain to the history of these devices and their direct impact on society. In this fascinating book, the author does discuss the historical developments and the direct impacts, but he also shows how these new innovations influenced other fields often in unexpected ways – some positive and some negative. The book is well illustrated with a great many useful figures and photographs that help make each story come to life.

    I found this book to be quite engaging and difficult to put down. The author’s writing style is quite friendly, often lively, cultured and widely accessible. This book can be enjoyed by any interested reader, but I suspect that science and technology enthusiasts as well as science history buffs will likely relish it the most.
  • Paula
    5.0 out of 5 stars A different and exciting history book
    Reviewed in Spain on June 20, 2021
    I'm not the biggest fun of history books but I definitely loved this one. It brings a different perspective in so many things we take for granted in the present time. Totally recommend.
  • Dr. Aman
    5.0 out of 5 stars History through the Eyes of Invention itself
    Reviewed in India on July 11, 2019
    This one is absolute gem of a book. It is more of a book of history on scientific revolutions viewed through the eyes of invention itself.
    It tells succinctly about all the butterfly effects and ,in the words of Johnson himself, hummingbird effects.
    Certain things we have taken for granted in our lives, which we even don't think where they come from.
    How generalized inventions like glass,cold, sound,clean, time and light shaped our lives and how these concepts evolved through the material discoveries, is all beautifully described.
    You will feel thankful to all the material inventions you use after the discovery of these concepts after reading this book.