
Watts' Perfect Engine: Steam and the Age of Invention
Synopsis
We all know the story. A young James Watt gazed up at a simmering kettle, then grew up and replaced the rattling lid with a piston, heralding the age of steam. But how much of this familiar legend is true? Ben Marsden's entertaining and informative book provides the answer, which as you might guess is: not a lot. Scotland on Sunday
James Watt is synonymous with the steam engine: Promethean symbol of the Industrial Revolution. But what motivated Watt to re-invent steam? And how did Watt's perfect engine become the progenitor of progress and its problems in nineteenth-century Britain?
Publisher information
- Publisher: Icon Books
- ISBN: 9781840465464
- Number of pages: 216
- Dimensions: 199 x 126 mm
- Weight: 220g
- Languages: English














