Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Watchmaker and antiquarian horologist Struthers debuts with a vivid history of her craft. Conveying the painstaking nature of a watchmaker's work, Struthers describes how she and her husband, Craig, spend between six months and six years making a new watch, often from salvaged parts, using equipment that dates to the 19th century. Her comprehensive history traces the evolution of timekeeping devices from sundials in ancient Egypt to the "Deep Space Atomic Clock," which is accurate to a deviation of less than two nanoseconds a day. Struthers effectively links these changing technologies to changing conceptions of time that shaped human society, noting, for example, that the proliferation of pocket watches in 18th-century England helped make the "specific time of an event... a more and more common part of witnesses' testimonies in crime reports." Elsewhere, Struthers delves into the intriguing story of "the Mona Lisa of watches," which was commissioned as a gift for Marie Antoinette in 1783, stolen from a Jerusalem museum in 1983, and recovered in 2006 after the thief made a deathbed confession to his wife. Heartfelt and deeply knowledgeable, this is an elegant tribute to a timeless art form. (June)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
An acclaimed expert provides a striking account of watches, their history, and their social impact. "Watches not only measure time, they are a manifestation of time--signifiers of the most precious thing we have," writes Struthers. The first watchmaker in British history to earn a doctorate in antiquarian horology, the study of time and timepieces, the author has devoted her life to them. Her debut book is a fascinating, charming examination, and Struthers ably melds the larger story with her own. She initially trained as a jeweler and silversmith, and before that, she was intrigued by forensics. All these came together when she encountered watchmaking, and she fell in love with the complexity and precision of the discipline. She takes a tour through the evolution of watches, noting that the first were produced in the early 16th century. Some watches constructed hundreds of years ago still work perfectly, with little maintenance; few machines can make comparable claims. The book has plenty of stories and colorful characters, making for a remarkable narrative. For a while, it looked as if mechanical watches would become extinct under pressure from digital technology, but the past decade has seen a new generation emerge as high-prestige items, and most of them are superb objects. Struthers provides a glossary as well as an appendix on how to repair a watch, and her expertise and passion for her subject shine through. She has always been aware of the passage of time, but it became an acute concern when she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. The prognosis is good, but it gave her a fresh perspective on her work. "We all measure our lives in moments of time, and the memories that accompany them," she writes. "Watches, which tell the time for us as they did for those before us, provide a constant in those memories." A beautiful story about beautiful things from someone who knows everything there is to know about the field. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.