Globe Pequot / Prometheus
Pages: 400
978-1-61592-177-5 • eBook • June 2010 • $11.00 • (£7.99)
""Seymour Schwartz provides a richly textured and illustrated biography of one of the most important maps in history by deftly placing this unique work within its geographical and historical context and recounting the major controversies associated with its creation, interpretation, and preservation. I recommend it to the casual reader as well as the serious student of history." RALPH E. EHRENBERGFormer Chief, Geography and Map Division, Library of CongressAuthor of Mapping the World: An Illustrated History of Cartography“The general reader should rejoice that Dr. Seymour Schwartz has happily combined a personal and genial account of his investigations into the earliest maps of America with the detailed story of how the amazing Waldseemüller map from 1507 was invented, printed, lost, rediscovered, and finally bought by the U. S. Library of Congress. Dr. Schwartz draws us into his tale with his infectious enthusiasm and well-informed connoisseurship." H. C. ERIK MIDELFORTC. Julian Bishko Professor of HistoryUniversity of Virginia“Schwartz's superb research takes us back to the early sixteenth century with a riveting tale of the history of America's first map - a must read for map lovers and historians.”DAVID A. COBBCurator, Harvard Map CollectionCo-editor of Mapping Boston“…this history of the map brings to life its colorful background in a fine recommendation for any college-level collection strong in world history.”-The Bookwatch, Midwest Book Review “…tells an interesting story filled with amazing twists and turns.” -Bookviews “…to be commended not only for the effort, but also because it is a readable document that deals with a desirable explanation of the map's origin, characteristics, and properties. The text is complemented by a number of color photographs showing maps, script, and individuals of major importance, including Vespucci. The bibliography is most helpful for further reading and understanding…Recommended.”-Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries “His narrative is engaging. He has woven several disparate threads of the map's story into a fascinating tale of exploration, intrigue, cartographic mystery, and the peculiarities of the rate book and map trade. This is the only volume to summarize all that is known not only about the map and its creation, but also about the provenance and specific history of the Library of Congress copy…this book will have great appeal to the general ready interested in the history of cartography, and in the process by which rare maps are studied, bought, and sold.”-Imago Mundi, International Journal for the History of Cartography
—