19 November 2008

Book Log 2008 #49: How the States Got Their Shapes by Mark Stein

I occasionally have good ideas. Pork nog. The home nuclear power plant. And, many years ago, a book about the geographic oddities one finds in the US, such as the small notch on the Massachusetts-Connecticut border, or the city that's part of Washington state even though the only land it's connected to is British Columbia. But, as with most of my good ideas, they get lost in the ether or banned by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. At least, until I ran across this book at the library.

Its approach is broader than the one I'd have taken, as it covers all 50 states (and DC) and discusses how each of them got the borders they have today. There's also a chapter preceding the state entries that talks about treaties and other events that set common borders so that it doesn't have to be mentioned in detail for each state involved (for example, the Western states that border Canada to the north).

The one semi-major problem is that the states are presented alphabetically rather than regionally, which can cause some problems if you're trying to flip between a state entry and the ones for neighboring states. Going regional would create some arbitrary decisions and at least a little overlap, but I think it'd have been more effective from a reading standpoint. I'd also have liked better maps, but the ones that are there are adequate.

Overall, though, a great book for geography nerds, with a good dash of history thrown in to boot.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah..but home, or at least neighborhood, nuclear power plants are starting to come around, I believe Toshiba is scheduled to install a test one in Alaska next year.

Craig Barker said...

Agree, same essential take on the book, but I have used references from it at least six times thus far in class this year.

Anonymous said...

Three thoughts:

1: backyard nuclear power plants are now in production.
http://gizmodo.com/5083522/backyard-nuclear-reactors-now-in-production-cost-25-million-each

2.: I went to State History Day with a presentation about the Honey War, which set the border between Missouri and Iowa. (Missouri v. Iowa 7 Howard 660)

3.: Can we redesign Texas's border so that Dubya's ranch is part of Mexico? Or Alaska when Todd and the gang secede?

4.: Yes, I know what 7 Howard 660 means.

For want of anything better to post, here's a breakdown of if I've been to the most populous 100 cities in the US, and if so for how...