An entertaining read on a subject that most people have an inkling of – London bridge was sold to the Americans – but don't really know the full story. The first half of the book details the rise and fall (naturally) of the mediaeval bridge, replaced in 1831, which was then itself torn down in 1968, and the Georgian bridge shipped to Arizona, the history of which is detailed in the second part. Elborough is a tangenital writer, dedicating 2 or 3 pages to William Randolph Hearst, for example, who was a collector of European antiquities but was dead 25 years before the Brits sold the Yanks the bridge. There's another few pages about shyster Arthur Ferguson who never actually existed. But other factoids, such as Robert Walpole ordering the second crossing over the river, Putney Bridge, in 1720 because the watermen refused to take him across at a late hour, or that revolutionary hero Thomas Paine was also an engineer who invented tarmac, were fascinating. Elborough over-writes at times, with a desire to get all of his research into some over-long, and unnecessarily detailed sentences, along with some similes that don't really work (comparing an ancient bridge to the Terminator), and the book could have done with an index, but overall, I was amused and informed.
And yes, the myth about the Americans thinking that they were buying Tower Bridge is just that.