Reviews
This smartly written and well-informed book focuses on a subject that very few people think about - the history of home heating in America... The writing flows well, making it an enjoyable read. The scholarship is sound.
Sean Patrick Adams's slim study touches lightly on this hot topic... The stove does not just heat; it allows us to see the 'connections we all have to wider networks of production, distribution, and consumption.
Home Fires is easily the most thorough and best-grounded account of the coal-based system of heating in the nineteenth-century United States. On the matters it considers, the book is authoritative. Adams, in addition, writes engagingly, constantly illustrating his general points with striking details and vignettes gleaned from extensive research, chiefly in printed primary and secondary sources.
Adams's Home Fires does, indeed, tell a fascinating story in the well-researched methodology of a trained and experienced historian, with a keen interest in using history to learn how to deal with the pressing issues of the future.
Adams’s Home Fires does, indeed, tell a fascinating story in the well-researched methodology of a trained and experienced historian, with a keen interest in using history to learn how to deal with the pressing issues of the future.
Book Details
Preface
Prologue
1. How the Industrial Economy Made the Stove
2. How Mineral Heat Came to American Cities
3. How the Coal Trade Made Heat Cheap
4. How the Industrial Hearth Defied Control
5. How Steam Heat
Preface
Prologue
1. How the Industrial Economy Made the Stove
2. How Mineral Heat Came to American Cities
3. How the Coal Trade Made Heat Cheap
4. How the Industrial Hearth Defied Control
5. How Steam Heat Found Its Limits
Epilogue
Notes
Selected Further Reading
Index