book data
551 ratings,
4.12
average rating, 119 reviews
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published
October 15th 1978
(first published 1977)
by Simon & Schuster
binding
Paperback, 704 pages
setting
Panama
literary awards
1977 National Book Critics Circle Award Nominee
isbn
0671244094
(isbn13: 9780671244095)
description
On December 31, 1999, after nearly a century of rule, the United States officially ceded ownership of the Panama Canal to the nation of Panama. That n...more
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avg 4.12
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
U.S. history buffs
This book tells the complete story of the building of the Panama Canal, beginning with the French efforts from 1870 to about 1889, and then continuing with the U.S. completion from 1902 to 1914. I found the parts describing the actual building of the canal (by both the French and the U.S.) to be the most interesting parts of the book. I was much less interested in the political machinations dealing with the U.S. - Columbia negotiations and the U.S. assistance in the creation of the Republic of...more
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3 comments
Read in September, 2008
My uncle recommended it. I had barely started it when we left on a cruise of the Panama Canal, sailing from LA. This book is a detailed, non-fiction account of France's selection of the canal site in Central America, the politics, diseases, intrigues, and construction of locks and "Big Dig".
I forgot all about the cruise ship activities and buried myself in this book. It awoke the "inner engineer" in me that I didn't know I had. I read it desperately night and day...more
I forgot all about the cruise ship activities and buried myself in this book. It awoke the "inner engineer" in me that I didn't know I had. I read it desperately night and day...more
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Read in January, 2008
Anything by David McCullough is well-researched and well-told. No exception here. We begin with the poorly conceived French plans, in which financial deception was paired with incredible ignorance of the geography and climate in question. Lesseps, builder of the Suez, is no match for the challenges of Panama. Wet heat, disease and ineptitude take their toll. (simply finding the "angle of repose" is a decades long conundrum) A new day emerges with Teddy Roosevelt, whose limited knowledg...more
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Read in December, 2008
This is the story of the building of the Panama Canal. The book is split up into three sections. The first (1870-1894) explores the French's attempt at building the canal at Panama. The French spent hundreds of millions of dollars with a loss of around 20,000 lives and ultimately failed in their endeavors. Their failure brought depression to the French and forced out the government's leaders. The next section (1890-1904) involves the United State's decision to build a canal in Central America. M...more
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Read in February, 2009
recommended to Lynne by:
Jean Hammonsrecommends it for: history lovers.
This massive undertaking is beyond my "how things work" imagination. I am especially impressed at the lock system, a feat of engineering remarkable in that it happened before 1914. The persistence to keep on digging despite huge annual landslides into the Culebra Cut through the continental divide is a testament to how important this project was to us. I never realized that the French began the canal. I also had never pondered the imperialistic drive that caused us to basically tak...more
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The Panama Canal appears to have been as much an administrative victory as a technological one. McCullough makes a compelling story out of selfish geniuses, bureaucracy, technological advances, hardship, and ultimately triumph. Plus my 2nd-favorite president is in it.
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Read in February, 2009
I read this book because we just returned from cruising the Panama Canal. I love historical fiction but this one is REAL HISTORY. It is a long book (almost 700 pages) with alot of detail, (and that is why I did not give it more stars . . . a little too detailed for me). Anyway, I found the huge egos involved in the Panama Canal quite interesting . . . from the very beginning with the French all the way through the finishing days with the United States. With so many workers dying of yellow fever,...more
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Read in April, 2009
This was another outstanding book by McCullough. David McCullough is one of the best history writers I've come across. You can see from my reviews that I've loved every one of his books that I've read. Some subjects would seem impossible to write about and make interesting, but he has a way with words. Like I always say, "Truth and history is far more interesting that fiction." This book starts with the French efforts to repeat their success on the Suez with a Panamanian canal. M...more
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Read in February, 2009
I picked this one up on a lark. I've read other books by McCullough and like him. I was at an all-day Science Olympiad event for two of my kids where they sequestered us in a classroom at Butler University while we waited for our kids. Our classroom had a bunch of books lying around, including this one. I started reading it and then checked it out from the library so I could finish it.
The book drags in many parts, but I learned a lot about the canal. I never knew that it began as a ...more
The book drags in many parts, but I learned a lot about the canal. I never knew that it began as a ...more
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Read in September, 2008
As much a political history as history of the world's most ambitious construction project, McCullough traces the tortuous fortunes of the canal in tandem with the lives of the men who dreamed of its completion. McCullough, ever with a keen eye for personalities and temperament, does a fine job of making key players come to life. Here we have that noble (if flawed) figurehead Ferdinand de Lesseps, the developer/hero of the Suez Canal, who undertook a similar mission at Panama (and failed). Her...more
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Read in September, 2008
recommends it for:
people interested in a thorough, in-depth analysis of the building of the Panama Canal
After 600-odd pages of Panama canal history, all I can say is 'whew!'
Honestly, I can't believe that I actually finished this monster, which has to be one of the longest history books I've actually read.
McCullough wrote 'The Path Between the Seas' in 1977, but as I got ready to transit the Panama canal, there were really no other books to read about the building of the 8th wonder of the world.
Alright, it is one of a couple of dozen places that people have call...more
Honestly, I can't believe that I actually finished this monster, which has to be one of the longest history books I've actually read.
McCullough wrote 'The Path Between the Seas' in 1977, but as I got ready to transit the Panama canal, there were really no other books to read about the building of the 8th wonder of the world.
Alright, it is one of a couple of dozen places that people have call...more
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This is a great book! Long (more than 650 pages) and printed in small font size. However, it is so full of interesting information (told in good and entertaining prose), documented facts, and historic photographs, that it is real pleasure to read. It covers more than 40 years of history of one of the greatest construction projects ever: the Panama Canal. From the failed efforts of the Frenchman Ferdinand de Lesseps to the completion of the canal by the Americans, David McCullough masterly descri...more
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Read in January, 1982
This account of the building of the Panama Canal is an excellent read. It blends history, engineering, political intrigue, and classic story telling.
McCullough, like Ambrose, brings history to the masses. This is not to say that it is lightweight in any regard, but rather that it is accessable.
Reading "The Path Between the Seas" it is difficult to imagine any similar project being undertaken in our times; an event in which one nations suffers 20,000 fatalitie...more
McCullough, like Ambrose, brings history to the masses. This is not to say that it is lightweight in any regard, but rather that it is accessable.
Reading "The Path Between the Seas" it is difficult to imagine any similar project being undertaken in our times; an event in which one nations suffers 20,000 fatalitie...more
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Read in January, 2000
I mentioned this book in my review of Nothing Like it... and I decided to review it here.
My father-in-law was reading this book while my wife and I were engaged. He loved it. I thought that he was a little crazy. How could the Panama Canal be so riveting? How could a person stand to read nearly a thousand pages about a canal? I was engaged to his daughter, and I love to read, so when he asked me if I wanted to borrow it, I wanted to say no, but I couldn't. I knew that he would want ...more
My father-in-law was reading this book while my wife and I were engaged. He loved it. I thought that he was a little crazy. How could the Panama Canal be so riveting? How could a person stand to read nearly a thousand pages about a canal? I was engaged to his daughter, and I love to read, so when he asked me if I wanted to borrow it, I wanted to say no, but I couldn't. I knew that he would want ...more
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Read in September, 2008
Okay, seriously, my husband and I started reading this book in February. We just finished it. Seeing as the building of the Panama Canal took something like 45 years, I guess it's appropriate that reading this book felt interminable. When the canal was finally completed (sorry to ruin the ending if you were hoping to be surprised), I felt like having a little party because we were finally done with it.
On the upside, it was actually very interesting. McCullough really is an amazing author ...more
On the upside, it was actually very interesting. McCullough really is an amazing author ...more
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Read in June, 2009
While David McCullough had already earned my respect with great books such as Truman and The Great Bridge: The Epic Story of the Building of the Brooklyn Bridge, the The Path Between the Seas was the best yet.
Instead of approaching the construction of the Panama Canal as simply a chronological exercise, McCullough focuses on key figures and how they shaped specific eras. During the French attempt at building the canal, larger than life figures such as Ferdinand de Lesseps shape th...more
Instead of approaching the construction of the Panama Canal as simply a chronological exercise, McCullough focuses on key figures and how they shaped specific eras. During the French attempt at building the canal, larger than life figures such as Ferdinand de Lesseps shape th...more
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Read in January, 2009
Kelly and I took a trip through the Panama Canal in January, something we've wanted to do for years. Great escape from winter. On the way, we both read David McCullough's terrific account of all the political, financial, engineering, medical issues involved in the building of the canal -- it is long, but, if you are interested in history, it's worth the slog! It is encouraging to realize that political and financial crises are nothing new!
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I listened to Edward Herrmann (outstanding) read this fascinating account of the construction of the Panama Canal. McCullough uses his gifts as historian and storyteller to chronicle every aspect of this epic task. He describes the extraordinary people who tackled medical, engineering and political challenges and coped with enormous hardship and sacrifice for more than four decades to get the job done.
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4 comments
First and foremost, anyone can enjoy some remarkable history by having it read to us! Secondly, it won the National Book Award! Thirdly, it can make the time pass for a couple driving to Vegas. Many men died building the Panama Canal. The climate simply bred mosquitoes carrying deadly disease. It was more dreaded to go to the hospital because so many didn’t survive there. (It was thought that standing the legs of the hospital beds in cups of water would keep crawling insects off of the b...more
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Read in March, 2009
Wow!! I loved this book!! It was amazing how for each portion of the development and building of the canal, the perfect person appeared in a leadership role. I learned so much. I would proabaly like another chapter on the Carter transfer to Panama. I was so interested in the political and business background of both the French and American attempts to organize support for the project. The biographical info was interesting. This was a great read. I hope I get to go there someday so I can ...more
































