𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Cover of Barons of the sea: and their race to build the world's fastest clipper ship

Barons of the sea: and their race to build the world's fastest clipper ship

✍ Scribed by Steven Ujifusa


Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Weight
906 KB
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Category
Fiction
ISBN
1476745978

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


In the grand tradition of David McCullough and Ron Chernow, the sweeping story of the nineteenth-century American dynasties who battled for dominance of the tea and opium trades.
There was a time, back when the United States was young and the robber barons were just starting to come into their own, when fortunes were made and lost importing luxury goods from China. It was a secretive, glamorous, often brutal businessβ€”one where teas and silks and porcelain were purchased with profits from the opium trade. But the journey by sea to New York from Canton could take six agonizing months, and so the most pressing technological challenge of the day became ensuring one's goods arrived first to market, so they might fetch the highest price.

Barons of the Sea tells the story of a handful of cutthroat competitors who raced to build the fastest, finest, most profitable clipper ships to carry their precious cargo to American shores. They were visionary, eccentric...


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
✍ Joshua Hammer πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2017 πŸ› Simon & Schuster 🌐 English βš– 3 MB

To save precious centuries-old Islamic texts from Al Qaeda, a band of librarians in Timbuktu pulls off a brazen heist worthy of Ocean's Eleven. In the 1980s, a young adventurer and collector for a government library, Abdel Kader Haidara, journeyed across the Sahara Desert and along the Niger River

cover
✍ Joshua Hammer πŸ“‚ Fiction πŸ“… 2017 πŸ› Simon & Schuster 🌐 English βš– 3 MB

To save precious centuries-old Islamic texts from Al Qaeda, a band of librarians in Timbuktu pulls off a brazen heist worthy of Ocean's Eleven. In the 1980s, a young adventurer and collector for a government library, Abdel Kader Haidara, journeyed across the Sahara Desert and along the Niger River