Cover Image: Timekeepers

Timekeepers

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Member Reviews

I really enjoyed the book, I felt the information was displayed well and that background was thoroughly researched. I would recommend this book.

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‘We work all hours so that we may eventually work less. We have invented quality time to distinguish it from that other time.’

Many of us are obsessed with time. People like me, for whom punctuality is a virtue of the first order, are continually dismayed and occasionally stressed by those for whom time is a relaxed, relative concept. We measure time, apportion it across the tasks we need to complete, try to allocate enough for human functions like eating and sleeping and, if there is any minute left unallocated, find some other activity with which to fill it. Or, perhaps that is just me?

‘Timekeepers’ was a perfect read for me. It gave me some insight into how (and why) we’ve become fixated on increasingly accurate measures of time. I learned about the French Revolutionary Calendar (and having read about it, can understand why I’d never heard of it before), found out more about the art and science involved in watchmaking than I’ll ever need to know, and wondered about the timing that Beethoven really wanted for his 9th Symphony.

Mr Garfield has included a lot of interesting information in this book. While I knew about US Senator Strom Thurmond’s 24 hour 18 minute speech in August 1957, I didn’t know that the Beatles recorded their first LP (excluding the singles) in less than one day in 1963. There is information as well about developments in recording music: those of us old enough to have heard recordings on the old 78 rpm records will know how much has changed!

‘Time once passive is now aggressive. It dominates our lives in ways that the earliest clockmakers would have surely found unbearable.’

As I read this book, I wondered about a few aspects of timekeeping. When did accuracy become so important? Was it necessary before the advent of train timetables? Has increasingly accurate measure of time driven timetabling, or is it the other way around? Is the level of accuracy in timekeeping required for (say) aircraft and train scheduling as important in other aspects of life?

I was reminded, too, how time can feel different. If you’ve waited in an emergency ward, or waited for a telephone call, minutes can feel like hours. If you’ve been in an accident, it often feels like everything is happening in slow motion. On the other hand, if you’ve been to an enjoyable event, hours seem to pass like minutes. Yes, I guess that time can be relative as well as absolute.

I really enjoyed this book, and would recommend it to anyone with an interest in time, and how we measure it.

Note: My thanks to NetGalley and Canongate Books for providing me with a free electronic copy of this book for review purposes.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

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I admit it. I am obsessed with time. I am retired (sort of) and have been since my company was bought out in 2009 and I decided (at the ripe old age of 36) that I didn't want to undergo complete life upheaval to work for a vast behemoth in a vast city. Since then I've moved back to the area where I grew up, gotten married, gotten two bonus kids in the bargain, and had a child. I stay at home - which is to say I'm never home, I'm always driving someone somewhere or fetching something forgotten and delivering it or shopping for something we've run out of yet again. But in theory, my day is less regulated than it ever was - yet I'm more obsessed with time than I ever was at any point in my career in office buildings.

Weird, to say the least. But apparently, I'm not the only one - as this delightful collection of stories, anecdotes, and life lessons couched as stories and anecdotes informed me. Through a series of exceedingly interesting and seemingly random tales about the relationship between people and time, Simon Garfield has managed to simultaneously make me more comfortable with my obsession and more worried about it - in the best possible way in both regards. This is an entertaining, well-written, collection of fun facts and thought-provoking ideas, and was an excellent find.

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Time is something we take for granted. Clocks work because they always have; calendars are obvious. This book provides an opportunity to question the things we take for granted. The nature of time is obviously something that can be too complicated and mathematical to think of, or philosophically exhausting, but the author approaches the topic with anecdotes that are easy to follow and interesting. Some chapters include things I didn't know like watch construction, or how revolutionary France changed clocks and calendars, while others everyone knows about, like time slowing when disaster strikes. This was really thought provoking and well argued. The tone is humorous, and light for a book about time, and will leave you more conscious of how society, history and people personally view something as difficult to grasp as time.

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The premise of Timekeepers was intriguing to me because I have always been interesting in perception of time. The segments were shorter than I liked, and sometimes I craved more elaboration and less dry humor.

I enjoyed most of the book. The footnotes were sometimes disruptive of the rhythm of the author’s writing, but I found it easy enough to just review them at the end of a segment.

Thanks to NetGalley for giving me the chance to read this book in exchange for an unbiased review.

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This looked cover made the book so intriguing I had to take a peek! And I am glad I did. I am still reading the book, but have been bouncing around between stories that have caught my eye. I loved the Revolver chapter on the Beatles! Lennon and McCartney were brilliant songwriters (imo) , but this chapter just blew me away! The Life is Short chapter was a fun read as was Slowing Down the World and White People Are Crazy. Just too entertaining with lots of food for thought. BTW check out John cages 4'33 on Youtube- it's a hoot!

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This is not a story or even a collection of stories. It is more a collection of essays about time, so don't read this if you want a plot.

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This book was really interesting to read. Time and timekeeping has always been fascinating to me, but I hadn't really considered how much time has an effect on everything. When one thinks about time and how it affects daily life, one tends to think about the daily routine, what day of the week
it is (is it Friday yet?), work deadlines, how long the bus is taking, things like that. This books goes beyond all of that and shows how time affects politics, arts, culture, science, history... Everything.
Reading this book the reader will certainly learn something new and have lots to think about. There are tons of facts here that I didn't know before and found utterly interesting. I applaud the amount of research and work that went into writing this book. I've been talking about it with everyone
around me, which is a great sign that it's a book worth reading.
This book wasn't always what I expected though. Some chapters were a bit too much for me, too many details about watchmaking for example. However, even in those chapters, there's enough interesting new information and humor.
In a society obsessed with having it all and having it now, the reader would not be mad to think that we have all gone nuts after reading this and maybe we have. One thing is guaranteed, this book will make you think about it and, perhaps, it might even make you consider that it's better to appreciate the quality of time instead of running against the clock.

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Excellent work. This book provides a different perpective to most of the time management tools we use everyday. This book is Interesting and educational and the author is able to bring some humour which is fantastic

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I enjoyed the concept of this book, though the execution at times felt a little distracting.
Time affects every human on the planet, but the ways in which it does so have changed over the centuries. Keeping time to the minute? It's a relatively recent innovation. The invention of trains and time tables had a lot to do with it. That discussion I found fascinating, as well as contemporary descriptions of how people felt about the hurrying up of their lives after trains became mainstream. I also enjoyed the segments on watchmaking.
Had the book stayed in the vein in which it started--the changing view of time relative to human activity, and the technological innovations that keep altering that--I would have stayed focused and on board. But some chapters wandered quite a bit and brought in lengthy extraneous information and stories that failed to keep my attention.

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Another good popular history, this one of the modern concept of time, with explorations of the French Revolutionary calendar, how printed timetables made trains be on time through adjusting public expectations, how trauma both speeds up time and makes waiting in the ER excruciatingly slow, filibustering speeches and how a time limit imposed by record singles and albums changed the musical form of songs (until CDs came along and changed them again).

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