50
Used, New, and Out of Print Books - We Buy and Sell - Powell's Books
Cart |
|  my account  |  wish list  |  help   |  800-878-7323
Hello, | Login
MENU
  • Browse
    • New Arrivals
    • Bestsellers
    • Featured Preorders
    • Award Winners
    • Audio Books
    • See All Subjects
  • Used
  • Staff Picks
    • Staff Picks
    • Picks of the Month
    • Bookseller Displays
    • 50 Books for 50 Years
    • 25 Best 21st Century Sci-Fi & Fantasy
    • 25 PNW Books to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Books From the 21st Century
    • 25 Memoirs to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Global Books to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Women to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Books to Read Before You Die
  • Gifts
    • Gift Cards & eGift Cards
    • Powell's Souvenirs
    • Journals and Notebooks
    • socks
    • Games
  • Sell Books
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Find A Store

Don't Miss

  • Scientifically Proven Sale
  • Staff Top Fives of 2022
  • Best Books of 2022
  • Powell's Author Events
  • Oregon Battle of the Books
  • Audio Books

Visit Our Stores


Powell's Staff: From the Buyers' Desk: Spring 2023 (0 comment)
The book buyers at Powell’s — the esteemed team that combs through catalogs and determines what new books to bring in — know all of the upcoming releases we should be placing preorders for now. For your eager, book-anticipating pleasure, they pulled together a wide-ranging list of 30 titles, books that cover everything from quantum computing...
Read More»
  • Dizz Tate: Books That Made Me Want to Write: Dizz Tate’s Bookshelf for Brutes (0 comment)
  • Harper C.: Five Book Friday: Uncanny Graphic Novels (0 comment)

{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##

1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus

by Charles C Mann
1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus

  • Comment on this title
  • Synopses & Reviews
  • Read an Excerpt
  • Read an Original Essay

ISBN13: 9781400032051
ISBN10: 1400032059
Condition: Standard


All Product Details

View Larger ImageView Larger Images
Ships free on qualified orders.
Add to Cart
$11.95
List Price:$19.00
Used Trade Paperback
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
QtyStore
8Burnside
3Cedar Hills

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

A groundbreaking work of science, history, and archaeology that radically alters our understanding of the Americas before the arrival of Columbus in 1492 — from "a remarkably engaging writer" The New York Times Book Review.

Contrary to what so many Americans learn in school, the pre-Columbian Indians were not sparsely settled in a pristine wilderness; rather, there were huge numbers of Indians who actively molded and influenced the land around them. The astonishing Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan had running water and immaculately clean streets, and was larger than any contemporary European city. Mexican cultures created corn in a specialized breeding process that it has been called man's first feat of genetic engineering. Indeed, Indians were not living lightly on the land but were landscaping and manipulating their world in ways that we are only now beginning to understand. Challenging and surprising, this a transformative new look at a rich and fascinating world we only thought we knew.

Review

"Engagingly written and utterly absorbing.... Part detective story, part epic and part tragedy." The Miami Herald

Review

"Fascinating....A landmark of a book that drops ingrained images of colonial American into the dustbin, one after the other." The Boston Globe

About the Author

Charles C. Mann, a correspondent for The Atlantic, Science, and Wired, has written for Fortune, The New York Times, Smithsonian, Technology Review, Vanity Fair, and The Washington Post, as well as for the TV network HBO and the series Law & Order. A three-time National Magazine Award finalist, he is the recipient of writing awards from the American Bar Association, the American Institute of Physics, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, and the Lannan Foundation. His 1491 won the National Academies Communication Award for the best book of the year. He lives in Amherst, Massachusetts.

Charles C. Mann on PowellsBooks.Blog

IMG: Charles C. Mann A few years ago, the science fiction writer Neal Stephenson complained that science fiction writers, who used to imagine bold, exciting new futures, now write in a “generally darker, more skeptical and ambiguous tone.” Tomorrow, he said, used to be greeted with anticipation...

Read More»


4.7 11

What Our Readers Are Saying

Share your thoughts on this title!
Average customer rating 4.7 (11 comments)

`
Mysterious6030 , January 02, 2013
Scientific and historical journalism at its best, Charles C. Mann presents an eminently readable explication of the latest insights into the nature of the American societies and civilizations which thrived in the 'New World' centuries before they became new. Delving into thorny questions such as when and how the first Americans reached these continents, when they developed recorded language, and how the Indians manipulated or even created the environment surrounding them, Mann presents the available evidence and speculation fairly, in an understandable fashion which never patronizes the reader or his subject.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(11 of 19 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
KEB , January 19, 2012 (view all comments by KEB)
1491 is a sweeping and gripping book about the Americas before Columbus which greatly increased my knowledge of the early American advanced civilizations. As one example, if we could rediscover how the indigenous Amazonians created the Amazon landscape and maintained fertility in tropical soils for 1000 years(!) we'd be able to improve poor tropical soils in Africa and elsewhere for sustainable agriculture.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(11 of 20 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
jcurry5556 , January 01, 2012
Excellent piece on disease and the history of the Americas before Columbus and its effects on post Colombian discoveries.It should be required reading in every Junior High class room.Charles Mann did an excellent job of presenting the information in a precise and informative manner.JEFF CURRY

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(12 of 21 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
California Girl , January 01, 2011
This is one of the most important and remarkable books I have ever read. Like most residents of the United States, I have been abysmally educated about the many magnificent civilizations that have previously flourished in North, Central, and South America. "1491," an account of what the Western Hemisphere was like on the eve of Columbus's discovery, expanded a thousand-fold my knowledge about and understanding of these civilizations - and, alas, of their destruction by European greed and diseases. An abridged version of this book should be required reading by every high school student in the United States. Not only would it lend us some much-needed humility about where our civilization fits into the history of the Western Hemisphere, but would help us respect the descendants of the pre-Columbian civilizations who live among us.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(6 of 8 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
Chris Langlois , January 01, 2011 (view all comments by Chris Langlois)
This is a stunning and engagingly written story, based on recent archeological, geological, and other research, of who was living in the Western Hemisphere, how they were living, and what the agriculture, cultures, and politics looked like. Every page is packed with terrific stuff. Here is an example: "When Columbus landed...the central Mexican plateau alone had a population of 25.2 million.By contrast, Spain and Portugal together had fewer than 10 million inhabitants." This one book amounts to a college course in the history, science and archaeology of our hemisphere. And, best of all, it is great fun!

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(2 of 3 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
Donna Klopfer , January 01, 2010 (view all comments by Donna Klopfer)
The book throws away all of the 'facts' of the natives that we learned in school. It's a scholarly book; one that I have recommended to friends.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(4 of 7 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
OneMansView , April 28, 2009 (view all comments by OneMansView)
Very informative, yet disorganized, wordy, and incomplete (3.75 *s) The author brings a journalistic perspective to this rather extensive review of the anthropological and archeological efforts that have been made over the last fifty years to understand the native cultures of both North and South America that more or less predated the arrival of Columbus in 1492. The book is essentially one long rebuke of the commonly held notion that the Americas were scarcely populated before Columbus and that its inhabitants were invariably uncultured, savage, and nomadic hunter-gatherers living in small tribes operating in pristine wildernesses. There are any number of key themes that interest the author. The most prominent area for correction, in direct contrast with the conviction of constant wandering, is the tendency of Indian cultures to create centralized, stable living arrangements, dating back several thousand years. Elaborate and sophisticated cities, with both practical and symbolic (religious) buildings, many remaining viable for hundreds of years, have been uncovered all across the Americas with Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Mexico, and the Southwestern U.S. being key sites. This urbanization was made possible due to a shift to agriculture for survival with maize, a form of corn, being the principal dietary staple. The surplus production of food supported a cultural and political elite, who then had the time to produce cultural products, direct working forces, and improve the technical infrastructure, such as irrigation systems. But all has not been straightforward in this broad corrective effort of our ancient history. Because the evidence used to reconstruct the past is so fragmentary and minimal and subject to vastly different interpretations, the conflicts among researchers and academics is a considerable part of the author’s story. For example, there are disagreements among “low-count” and “high-count” theorists concerning the total population of the Americas at any one time, with higher projections being around fifty million. The debate about who were the first arrivals in the Americas, and when and how they came, still rages. Such issues as whether the soil along the Amazon River could have supported large towns still result in bitter denunciations in academic journals. The author makes clear that the native societies that the Europeans found in both North and South America were mere shells of what once existed. Little did they know that early visitors introduced diseases, like hepatitis and small pox, which virtually wiped out entire populations, forcing Indians to fall back to more primitive modes of living devoid of former cultural complexity. The genetic susceptibility of Indians to these diseases, beyond the lack of immunity gained due to exposure, is discussed. Also, the Europeans did not appreciate the efforts Indians made to shape their environments by such measures as controlled burning of woodlands or controlling the density of wildlife. It is interesting that New Englanders, according to the author, were leery of the democratic and communal tendencies that they found among the Indians, which they saw as undermining their hierarchical social order. The book is beyond a doubt highly informative, but its lack of organization and even editing gets in the way. The journalistic tendency to overload with facts is evident. It is hardly necessary to give the name of every researcher encountered by the author; that’s why there are notes. Worse, is the author’s tendency to randomly jump among time frames and locales. This is where a detailed time line of Indian societies would have been very helpful. There’s no doubt that the author leaves himself open to a view that he romanticizes Indian culture. Perhaps the early Indian cultures compare favorably to the Mesopotamians, but one wonders whether such equivalency can be found in regard to the Greeks and Romans. It’s difficult for the reader to answer that question, because, while the author roams widely geographically, there is a noticeable lack of any real detail about any of the Indian cultures. Certainly, our understanding of any of them is miniscule compared to what we know about the Greeks. He doesn’t ignore the violence on both sides of the Atlantic. Some Indian cultures made human sacrifice a part of religious rituals, while Europeans engaged in massive executions to force religious conformity – pretty squeamish stuff, regardless. The author emphasizes the destructive nature of the European intrusion on Indian societies. That seems exaggerated, because countless sophisticated Indian societies disappeared well before Europeans arrived. Environmental developments and warfare are either given or suggested as reasons for those societies disintegration. Basically, the interesting aspects of the book outweigh its shortcomings. However, it is clear that this book merely scratches the surface of our early Indian peoples.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(12 of 21 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
redrockbookworm , July 22, 2008 (view all comments by redrockbookworm)
This is one of the most captivating books you will read this year. It will take all of those "truths" you studied so diligently in school and make you question, question, question. Were the Americas (before Columbus) really the unblemished Garden of Eden setting that we have been told, or as Mann purports, were the Native's altering the terrain long before the arrival of Europeans on the scene? The fact that the ancient Aztec capital of Tenochtilan had more inhabitants than Paris and boasted running water and an enclosed sewer system would seem to lend credence to Mann's claims of the native locals shaping their environment and managing their food supplies to satisfy their comfort and convenience levels for many, many years before the appearance of Columbus or Cortez. Mann's subject matter and writing style as well as his vision, as he attempts to show both sides of this discussion, should assure this "scientific" tome a place of honor on the best seller list. It certainly provides the reader with a lot of food for thought and is definitely a lot more convincing and enthralling than much of the current material residing on the list of best sellers provided by our local newspapers.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(12 of 19 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
Mikel O , June 28, 2007 (view all comments by Mikel O)
Some of will remember how we all learned in science class that Mercury kept one side to the Sun at all times; one face meltingly hot, the other the coldest planet in the solar system; a picture that inspired dozens of sci-fi novelists. Then the scientists said oops, no, we were wrong, Mercury does rotate enough to show all sides to the sun, after all. Well, remember how we learned that the first Americans came over the Bering land bridge less than 15,000 years ago; crossed Canada through an ice free corridor that closed up behind them, hunting big game all the way? That their hunting caused mass extinctions? That they spread lightly across two continents, living in sparse hunter gatherer communities that were no match for European guns? Oops -- this is all wrong, too. For me 1491 was like a good thriller, I couldn't turn the pages fast enough, new science in every paragraph. The well-researched picture he shows will turn every idea you held of the New World upside down. Fascinating and mind-boggling.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(18 of 34 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
Peter Saucerman , April 06, 2007 (view all comments by Peter Saucerman)
Revisionist history with a scientific backbone. Charles Mann has succeeded in knitting archaeological and anthropological findings together to turn our orthodox beliefs about the Americas, pre-Columbus, on their heads. Much of this science is not really new and many of the findings are regional and incremental. But his skill in connecting the dots presents a startling new picture of the New World, one quite at odds with the conventional textbook stories of a vast, empty continent. He starts each section with a clear overview of the new view he will be charting, then descends into sometimes complex, sometimes arcane pieces of anthro- or archaeological work. Just as it's getting pretty dense for the lay-reader, he has the good sense to link back to the bigger picture. I learned a good bit about the work of these history detectives, as well as getting a very, very different picture of the peoples that lived here for millennia before Columbus.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(17 of 24 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

`
Lawrence Gaye , January 22, 2007 (view all comments by Lawrence Gaye)
I have always enjoyed following the saga of the peopleing of the America's as promulgated by the various camps of American archaeology. Charles Mann takes us on a virutal tour of the America's before Columbus by introducing us to it's first peoples. The resulting impact and scope of life here before and after the arrival of "modern" Europeans is well illustrated and documented. The pristine wilderness that greeted the earliest European visitors had already been engineered by the original inhabitants to enable them to enjoy a viable and civilized America with a well fed and organized population. Savanna's and forests were here by virtue of the careful management by the first occupants who thickly populated the continents of North and South America. Once again I am confronted with the reluctance of science to accept new ideas simply to defend turf. "1491" is a great book, an enjoyable read and a real service to all interested in the history of the America's, the people who first managed it, and we who continue to do so today.

Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No

(12 of 18 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment

View all 11 comments


Product Details

ISBN:
9781400032051
Binding:
Trade Paperback
Publication date:
10/10/2006
Publisher:
PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE
Series info:
Vintage
Pages:
576
Height:
1.20IN
Width:
5.10IN
Thickness:
1.25
Series:
Vintage
Number of Units:
1
Illustration:
Yes
Copyright Year:
2006
UPC Code:
2801400032053
Author:
Charles C Mann
Author:
Charles C. Mann
Author:
Charles C. Mann
Subject:
Indians -- Origin.
Subject:
Antiquities
Subject:
Native American-General Native American Studies
Subject:
America Antiquities.

Ships free on qualified orders.
Add to Cart
$11.95
List Price:$19.00
Used Trade Paperback
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
QtyStore
8Burnside
3Cedar Hills

More copies of this ISBN

  • New, Trade Paperback, $19.00
  • Used, Trade Paperback, Starting from $8.95

This title in other editions

  • New, Hardcover, $40.00
  • Used, Hardcover, Starting from $10.50
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram

  • Help
  • Guarantee
  • My Account
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Security
  • Wish List
  • Partners
  • Contact Us
  • Shipping
  • Transparency ACT MRF
  • Sitemap
  • © 2023 POWELLS.COM Terms

{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##