Waubonsee Community College

Further adventures of the celestial sleuth, using astronomy to solve more mysteries in art, history, and literature, Donald W. Olson

Label
Further adventures of the celestial sleuth, using astronomy to solve more mysteries in art, history, and literature, Donald W. Olson
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrationsmaps
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Further adventures of the celestial sleuth
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1006305821
Responsibility statement
Donald W. Olson
Series statement
Springer-Praxis books in popular astronomy
Sub title
using astronomy to solve more mysteries in art, history, and literature
Summary
"From the author of Celestial Sleuth (2014), yet more mysteries in art, history, and literature are solved by calculating phases of the Moon, determining the positions of the planets and stars, and identifying celestial objects in paintings. In addition to helping to crack difficult cases, these studies spark our imagination and provide a better understanding of the skies. Weather archives, vintage maps, tides, historical letters and diaries, military records and the assistance of experts in related fields help with this work. For each historical event influenced by astronomy, there is a different kind of mystery to be solved. How did the changing tides affect an army's battle plans? How did the phases of the Moon affect how an artist painted a landscape? Follow these exciting investigations with a master 'celestial sleuth' as he tracks down the truth and helps unravel mysteries as far back as the Middle Ages and as recent as the iconic 1945 photograph of a kiss in Times Square on VJ Day. Topics or 'cases' pursued were chosen for their wide public recognition and intrigue and involve artists such as Vincent van Gogh and Claude Monet; historical events such as the campaigns of Braveheart in Scotland and battles in World War II and the Korean War; and literary authors such as Chaucer, Cervantes, Shakespeare, Byron, and Poe"--Back cover
Table Of Contents
Part I. Astronomy in art. Monet in London, J.M.W. Turner, and Ford Madox Brown ; Monet in Étretat, Édouard Manet, and Vincent van Gogh ; Caspar David Friedrich, Canaletto, and Edvard Munch ; Monet in Le Havre : origins of impressionism ; VJ Day Times Square Kiss, and Ansel Adams in Alaska -- Part II. Astronomy in history. Braveheart and the Battle of Stirling Bridge, the discovery of the Ring Nebula, and the 1913 Great Meteor Procession ; World War II and the Korean War -- Part III. Astronomy in literature. Literary skies before 1800 ; Literary skies after 1800 -- Part IV. The terrestrial sleuth. J.M.W. Turner and the Great Western Railway, and John Everett Millais and an ancient oak
Classification
Content
Mapped to