This “Histomap,” created by John B. Sparks, was first printed by Rand McNally in 1931….
This giant, ambitious chart fit neatly with a trend in nonfiction book publishing of the 1920s and 1930s: the “outline,” in which large subjects (the history of the world! every school of philosophy! all of modern physics!) were distilled into a form comprehensible to the most uneducated layman.
The 5-foot-long Histomap was sold for $1 and folded into a green cover, which featured endorsements from historians and reviewers. —Slate.
Similar:
"Only You" -- 11yo Carolyn Sings a Power Ballad from "Starlight Express"
The observation car Pearl sings of her l...
Aesthetics
Consciousness: Where Are Words?
Words, words, words. With the advent of ...
Culture
Christmas Day Truce 1914: Volunteers re-enact football game on Belgium fields
Men in authentic period uniforms of the ...
Culture
The Whole Internet Hates Me
Amusing
Why Study Humanities? What I Tell Engineering Freshmen
Science writer Jon Horgan writes:
We li...
Academia
Jimmy Maher's Appreciation of Infocom's Classic Sherlock Text Adventure
I learned a lot while reading this enjoy...
Business



