cover image WINGS OF MADNESS: Alberto Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flight

WINGS OF MADNESS: Alberto Santos-Dumont and the Invention of Flight

Paul Hoffman, . . Hyperion/Theia, $24.95 (369pp) ISBN 978-0-7868-6659-5

This thoroughly entertaining history of one of the currently overlooked heroes from early–20th-century aviation equals that of Hoffman's earlier volume, The Man Who Loved Only Numbers. Almost unknown today except in his native Brazil (where he is a revered figure), Alberto Santos-Dumont was known throughout the world as "a maverick among contemporary aeronauts." Obsessed with the idea of flight from an early age, Santos-Dumont (1873–1932) was an eccentric genius whose inherited wealth allowed him to live in luxury in fin-de-siècle Paris, at first working on ballooning. After designing small, cigar-shaped, engine-powered vehicles, which he used for everything from traveling around Paris to circling the Eiffel Tower, he soon became one of the best-known men in the city. Later he built "the world's first sports plane." Hoffman expertly recaptures from the historical dustbin the many facets of this unique character who befriended the Rothschilds and Cartiers, ran in the same crowd as Marcel Proust and devoted his life to a singular passion unmatched even by the obsessive Wright Brothers during the early days of aviation, "a time when the vast majority of Europeans and Americans had not yet traveled along the ground in an automobile." (June)

Forecast:This year is the 100th anniversary of flight, and this solid narrative should stand out among the many books being published on the Wright Brothers.