“David B. Williams can see the invisible. He notices the lost
dramas fossilized in brownstones and statues, in the doorsteps and roof
slates we walk by every day. Only such an operatic theme as the enduring
grandeur of stone could encompass in a single book everything from
Martian meteorites to school blackboards to dinosaur tracks. Williams's
epic story is rich in colorful eccentrics, from Michelangelo to Robinson
Jeffers, but no character comes alive more vividly than the restless,
creative Earth itself.”—Michael Sims, author of Apollo's Fire
and Adam's Navel
Within the fabric of every stone building is a wondrous story of
geological origins, architectural aesthetics, and cultural
history.
You probably don’t expect to make geological finds
along the sidewalks of a major city, but when natural history writer
David B. Williams looks at the stone masonry, façades, and
ornamentations of buildings, he sees a range of rocks equal to any
assembled by plate tectonics. In Stories in Stone, he introduces
us to a three-and-a-half-billion-year-old rock called Morton gneiss that
is the color of swirled pink-and-black taffy; a 1935 gas station made of
petrified wood; and a fort in St. Augustine, Florida, that has withstood
three hundred years of attacks and hurricanes, despite being made of a
stone (coquina) that has the consistency of a granola bar.
Williams shows us why a white, fossil-rich limestone from Indiana
became the only building stone to be used in all fifty states; how the
construction of the granite Bunker Hill Monument in 1825 led to
America’s first commercial railroad; and why Carrara marble—the favorite
sculpting material of Michelangelo— warped so much after only nineteen
years on a Chicago skyscraper that all forty-four thousand panels of the
stone had to be replaced. From Brooklyn to Philadephia, from limestone
to travertine, Stories in Stone will inspire readers to realize
that, even in the most modern metropolis, evidence of our planet’s
natural wonders can be found all around us in building stones that are
far less ordinary than we might think at first glance.