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April 2012  227 C&RL News

George M. Eberhart is senior editor of American Libraries, 
e-mail: geberhart@ala.org

N e w  P u b l i c a t i o n sGeorge M. Eberhart

periments with concrete in the late 18th and 
early 19th centuries, but it wasn’t until the 
1890s, when concrete began to be routinely 
reinforced by iron and steel bars, that con-
struction took off. Unfortunately, as Courland 
points out, rebar is extremely prone to oxida-
tion, which gradually causes the surrounding 
concrete to deteriorate and requires expen-
sive restoration. Much of 20th-century Ameri-
can infrastructure—bridges, roads, buildings, 
dams—is crumbling because of this corro-
sion, giving these projects a life span of 100 
years or less. Only in the past two decades 
have engineers begun testing and using non-
ferrous rebar. $26.00. Prometheus, 978-1-
61614-481-4.

Explorers of the Nile: The Triumph and Trag-
edy of a Great Victorian Adventure, by Tim 
Jeal (510 pages, November 2011), recounts 
the search for the source of the White Nile 
between 1856 and 1876 by seven intrepid 
British explorers—Richard Burton, John 
Hanning Speke, James Augustus Grant, 
Samuel Baker, Florence von Sass, David  
Livingstone, and Henry Morton Stanley. Much 
more than a long-needed update to Alan 
Moorehead’s The White Nile (1960), Jeal’s 
vivid narrative examines the consequences of 
their discoveries on the peoples and politics 
of Uganda and the Sudan, extending all the 
way to the secession of South Sudan in 2011. 
In particular, he includes much new informa-
tion on the enigmatic Speke, gleaned from 
excised portions of his book and other first-
hand sources. $32.50. Yale University. 978-0-
300-14935-7.

The Eye of the Connoisseur: Authenticating 
Paintings by Rembrandt and His Contempo-
raries, by Anna Tummers (349 pages, No-
vember 2011), examines the art of connois-
seurship, or the ability to identify instinctively 
the artist who painted a picture. In a post-
modern world, the context of a painting or 
sculpture has become more important than 

The Bear: History of a Fallen King, by Michel 
Pastoureau, translated by George Holoch 
(343 pages, October 2011), correlates the de-
cline of the European brown bear in medi-
eval art and myth with the triumph of Chris-
tianity over paganism. Venerated in ancient 
times by Germanic, Celtic, and Slavic tribes 
as the king of beasts, the bear’s reputation as 
an invincible demonic force was targeted by 
Christian kings and prelates for destruction—
often quite literally, as in the great German 
bear massacres organized by Charlemagne in 
the late 8th century. Pastoureau shows how 
by the 12th century Christianity had adopted 
the lion as an alternative symbol, eventually 
dethroning and emasculating the bear into 
muzzled circus animals and children’s toys. 
$29.95. Belknap Press of Harvard University. 
978-0-674-04782-2.

Concrete Planet, by Robert Courland (396 
pages, November 2011), surveys the history 

of concrete, the 
world’s most 
common man-
made substance, 
composed of a 
mix of rocks, 
sand, cement, 
and water. The 
Romans set the 
gold standard 
in concrete con-
struction, creat-
ing structures 
that have lasted 

nearly 2,000 years. The Pantheon in Rome, 
completed in 126 CE, remains the largest un-
reinforced concrete dome in the world. After 
the Roman Empire collapsed, the formula for 
making concrete was lost and not rediscov-
ered for some 1,300 years. Improvements in 
cement led to occasional architectural ex-



C&RL News April 2012  228

On the Ground: An Illustrated Anecdotal 
History of the Sixties Underground Press in 
the U.S., edited by Sean Stewart (203 pages, 
November 2011), brings together abundant 
samples of artwork from alternative news-
papers from 1967 to 1974, supplemented by 
interviews with 25 people who produced, 
illustrated,  and distributed them—including 
Al Goldstein, Paul Krassner, Bill Ayers, Trina 
Robbins, and Spain Rodriguez. The collec-
tion captures the excitement, commitment, 
and anarchy of the era. $20.00. PM Press. 
978-1-60486-455-7.

Steam: An Enduring Legacy: The Railroad 
Photographs of Joel Jensen, with essays 
John Gruber and Scott Lothes (160 pages, 
October 2011), showcases 150 photographs 
of steam locomotives taken since the late 
1980s by Joel Jensen, who manages to make 
each black-and-white image look timeless. 
Often shot against spectacular Western 
vistas, Jensen’s photos chronicle the raw 
power of the steam engine and the rugged 
engineers and mechanics who keep them 
running. $50.00. W. W. Norton. 978-0-393-
08248-7.

Texas, New Mexico, and the Compromise 
of 1850, by Mark J. Stegmaier (434 pages, 
revised ed., January 2012), is a detailed 
examination of one of the most important 
boundary disputes in U.S. history. First 
published in 1996 by Kent State University 
Press, the book identifies the Texas–New 
Mexico boundary as the most serious sec-
tional crisis prior to the Civil War, though 
often eclipsed by other aspects of the com-
promise bill, such as the revamped fugitive 
slave law and California statehood. Steg-
maier contrasts the attitudes of Presidents 
Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore to the 
crisis, which involved sending U.S. troops 
to the New Mexico Territory to thwart a 
potential invasion by Texans, and surveys 
the roles played by William Seward, Daniel 
Webster, Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, 
and Henry S. Foote. $34.95. Texas Tech 
University. 978-0-89672-697-0. 

its author-
ship, and 
the art of 
the con-
n o i s s e u r 
has dwin-
dled in val-
ue, making 
m i s c a t a -
loging and 
m u s e u m 
d e a c c e s -
sions more 
f r e q u e n t . 

Tummers tries to reverse this trend by fo-
cusing on the methodology of art connois-
seurs in the field of Dutch and Flemish 17th-
century paintings and the criteria they use 
in making attributions. She also deals with 
distinctions between originals and copies, 
shared authorship between master and pu-
pils, stylistic irregularities, and the intangible 
assessment of quality. Well-documented 
and richly illustrated, this volume addresses 
a neglected aspect of art history. $60.00. J. 
Paul Getty Museum. 978-1-60606-084-1

Hedy’s Folly, by Richard Rhodes (261 pages, 
November 2011), tells the story of Austri-
an-American actress Hedy Lamarr and her 
collaboration with pianist and composer 
George Antheil that led to their 1942 pat-
ent for a frequency-hopping, radio-directed 
torpedo that resists jamming efforts. Lamarr 
contributed the concept (based on conver-
sations she overheard in the 1930s by Ger-
man and Austrian weapons experts) and 
Antheil the mechanism, which was par-
tially based on a player-piano apparatus. 
The technology was rejected by the U.S. 
Navy during the war, because it sounded 
too bulky to the Navy brass, and the patent 
expired in 1959. However, Rhodes notes 
that Lamarr’s frequency-hopping, spread-
spectrum concept was reworked several 
times between 1945 and 1978 by U.S. de-
fense agencies, leading to a reevaluation of 
her skills as an inventor. $26.95. Double-
day. 978-0-385-53438-3.