Wings of Madness
Alberto Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flight
Hoffman, Paul
The story of man's struggle to fly is full of larger-than-life personalities, but none was so eccentric, so entertaining or so complex as Alberto Santos-Dumont, the Brazilian 'father of aviation'. An engineer and dandy, Santos-Dumont was the darling of the international press in the first decade of the twentieth Century, hopping from Parisian restaurant to nightclub in his personal flying machine, circling the Eiffel Tower in his balloon No. 6 or dining with the Rothschilds and Roosevelts.
Yet Santos-Dumont was a troubled genius. Depressed by the success of the Wright brothers in Kitty Hawk and by the increasing militarisation of flight, he retreated to European Sanatoriums throughout the 1920s, returning to Brazil only to be confronted by the horrors of civil war. Paul Hoffman teils the tale of Santos-Dumont and modern flight with wit and sympathy, showing us how often brilliance is coupled with tragedy.
Softcover
369 Seiten / pages
many photos
very good condition
London - 2004 - Harper
Art.Nr. 16661