This is a biography of the playboy pioneering balloonist for whom Louis Cartier invented the first wristwatch, and who, mistakenly, thought that he was the first man to fly.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great little book about the real inventor of the airplane,
This review is from: Man Flies (Hardcover)
I have just read the book, and it's great. It's really well written, and even if it doesn't go too deep (and I believe that was never Mrs. Winters' goal with this project), it goes deep enough to raise a few eyebrows, and make us wonder: how come the real inventor of the airplane can be almost forgotten nowadays?After all, his vehicle, the 14-bis, unlike the Wright Brothers Flyer, could fly by its own means...
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great reading about the Father Of Aviation!,
By Arsenio Fornaro (arsenio@webtv.net) (Newark, NJ - USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man Flies (Hardcover)
It left me wanting for even more! This book told me a lot about the greatest pioneer of aviation! Very pleasant presentation and chronological progression of events.The photographs, some of which I've never seen before, are very nice too! I wish the author would release yet another book from the product of her diggings about Santos-Dumont.
9 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Was Nancy Winters trying to write a children's book?,
By bob lowe (Seattle WA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Man Flies (Hardcover)
If so she succeeded, because "Man Flies" certainly reads like one. It's not just that her cloyingly cute and vaguely condescending writing style would quickly become grating on any reader much past adolescence. Winters accomplishes the incredible feat of making a deeply moving and compelling true story seem almost tedious with an analysis which seldom rises above the comic-book level. And her research is really no better than her writing. Her arrogant claim that she was the one to "uncover the story of Alberto Santos-Dumont" is an insult to all serious students of aviation history, who are not only quite familiar with Alberto but can easily spot the sloppy inaccuracies in this book.[i.e., Winters' flatly stating that Santos-Dumont was the first to achieve powered, steered lighter-than-air flight. He wasn't; others beat him to it by over a decade.] But the most compelling question about Alberto is this: how could a man once almost universally hailed as the father of flight [the very first newspaper story about the Wright brothers was headlined "Local boys emulate the great Santos-Dumont"!] be so generally forgotten today? It is a question Winters barely even mentions, much less answers. Alberto deserves so much better a biography than this. In fact, he got one: "Santos-Dumont: A Study in Obsession" by Peter Wykeham. [Now out of print, but well worth looking for.]
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