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The Wright Brothers Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 21,010 ratings

Two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize David McCullough tells the dramatic story behind the story about the courageous brothers who taught the world how to fly: Wilbur and Orville Wright.

On December 17, 1903, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, Wilbur and Orville Wright's Wright Flyer became the first powered, heavier-than-air machine to achieve controlled, sustained flight with a pilot aboard. The Age of Flight had begun. How did they do it? And why? David McCullough tells the extraordinary and truly American story of the two brothers who changed the world.

Sons of an itinerant preacher and a mother who died young, Wilbur and Orville Wright grew up on a small sidestreet in Dayton, Ohio, in a house that lacked indoor plumbing and electricity but was filled with books and a love of learning. The brothers ran a bicycle shop that allowed them to earn enough money to pursue their mission in life: flight. In the 1890s flying was beginning to advance beyond the glider stage, but there were major technical challenges the Wrights were determined to solve. They traveled to North Carolina's remote Outer Banks to test their plane because there they found three indispensable conditions: constant winds, soft surfaces for landings, and privacy.

Flying was exceedingly dangerous; the Wrights risked their lives every time they flew in the years that followed. Orville nearly died in a crash in 1908 but was nursed back to health by his sister, Katharine - an unsung and important part of the brothers' success and of McCullough's book. Despite their achievement the Wrights could not convince the US government to take an interest in their plane until after they demonstrated its success in France, where the government instantly understood the importance of their achievement. Now, in this revelatory book, master historian David McCullough draws on nearly 1,000 letters of family correspondence plus diaries, notebooks, and family scrapbooks in the Library of Congress to tell the full story of the Wright brothers and their heroic achievement.

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Product details

Listening Length 10 hours and 2 minutes
Author David McCullough
Narrator David McCullough
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date May 05, 2015
Publisher Simon & Schuster Audio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B00TA5MPEU
Best Sellers Rank #4,145 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#1 in Aviation Engineering
#11 in Biographies of Science & Technology Leaders
#22 in Historical Biographies (Audible Books & Originals)

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4.5 out of 5 stars
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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and inspiring. They describe it as a great historical account of the Wright Brothers' journey. The research is well-received, with readers finding the story informative and interesting. Readers appreciate the brothers' perseverance, creativity, and inventiveness. They also mention that the book keeps their attention with its twists and turns. Overall, customers find the character development of the Wright Brothers to be masterful.

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3,628 customers mention "Readability"3,541 positive87 negative

Customers find the book engaging and inspiring. They praise the author's masterful prose and storytelling skills. The events leading up to the Wright Brothers' achievement are described in a compelling way.

"David McCullough is a master storyteller who has revitalized historical personalities and events for millions of readers and a multitude of viewers..." Read more

"McCullough has written a serious and riveting review of the lives of Wilbur and Orville. His writing style is concise, thorough, and unpretentious...." Read more

"...The book is written in a very readable style that relates not only their progress and accomplishments, but also blends in telling insights into..." Read more

"...In this book, he tells a compelling story of how the Wright brothers convinced the world for the first time that flying through the air was possible..." Read more

1,475 customers mention "History"1,446 positive29 negative

Customers find the book an engaging historical account of one of America's greatest stories. They describe it as a fascinating journey back in time, with well-researched events and monumental moments. Readers praise the author as a master of historical literature and a deft biographer. Overall, they describe the book as an excellent biography of the Wright Brothers.

"...Wilbur captivated Europe with his spectacular flights. Various foreign governments were interested in contracts...." Read more

"...Theirs is the perfect American Hero story set in the midst of the industrial revolution that transformed America into a world leader in inventions..." Read more

"Airplane is an important invention...." Read more

"...He also touches briefly on other Wright brothers who pursued other careers, married and had families...." Read more

1,311 customers mention "Research quality"1,234 positive77 negative

Customers appreciate the book's research quality. They find the story interesting and informative, with details about the testing and development of the airplane. The author conveys a wealth of information without being excessively detailed.

"...their passion, grit, extraordinary creative thinking, and uncommon tinkering, created modern-day flying...." Read more

"...These two men had an insight into, and a reverence for, quantitative empirical data that was unique in aeronautical engineering at that time...." Read more

"...their progress and accomplishments, but also blends in telling insights into their personalities, character, patience, and determination...." Read more

"...reliable and affordable means of transportation thanks to decades of scientific progress and various technological innovations...." Read more

272 customers mention "Perseverance"272 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the Wright brothers' perseverance and bravery. They find the book relatable, describing them as determined men with grit and determination. The brothers are presented as human, sharing stories of their failures and struggles while also clearly displaying their willingness to work hard and record with precision.

"...led by their religious father, blessed with the work ethic, self-discipline, and determination to see it through to reality...." Read more

"...Ever since its coming into existence, it has already evolved into a reliable and affordable means of transportation thanks to decades of scientific..." Read more

"...Eventually they were able to get an aircraft up, keep it up for long periods of time and even control the direction of the plane by doing circles..." Read more

"...including those already mentioned, I loved Mornings on Horseback, Brave Companions, and I look forward now to The Path Between the Seas which..." Read more

270 customers mention "Creativity"270 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the Wright Brothers' inventive genius and their great invention. They find the book an amazing account of two great inventers that gets them close to being there. Readers praise their determination, commitment, originality, and careful attention to detail. The book teaches us about courage, intellect, and dedication from two of the brightest minds in American history.

"...These two Dayton boys, through their passion, grit, extraordinary creative thinking, and uncommon tinkering, created modern-day flying...." Read more

"...What is so astounding is not just that they solved these technical problems and reduced them to practice, but that they did it in record time...." Read more

"...only about them but about their experiments, inventions, and entrepreneurial spirit that formed the foundation for their success...." Read more

"...Though primitive, it was an astounding creation and its news quickly reached as far as Europe...." Read more

244 customers mention "Interest"212 positive32 negative

Customers find the book engaging and interesting. They say it keeps their attention with twists and turns. The story is well-written and they describe it as an extraordinary adventure and a very exciting time. There is plenty of content, but some lacks depth. Overall, customers find it satisfying and educational.

"...who has revitalized historical personalities and events for millions of readers and a multitude of viewers of PBS and HBO...." Read more

"...His writing style is concise, thorough, and unpretentious...." Read more

"...One of the most satisfying and edifying reads I've had in a long time." Read more

"...home the importance of the Wrights' emphasis on simplicity, intellectual hunger and plain diligence, hard work and determination...." Read more

234 customers mention "Character development"232 positive2 negative

Customers find the character development of the Wright Brothers masterful. They describe them as outstanding human beings with tenacity and integrity. The book captures their personalities and integrates them with the times. Readers appreciate the author's ability to present them as human, sharing stories of their failures and fights. Overall, they describe the characters as relatable and real people with amazing talents.

"David McCullough is a master storyteller who has revitalized historical personalities and events for millions of readers and a multitude of viewers..." Read more

"...They were of the finest character, and admired by all who met them, from Kings and Presidents to the common man...." Read more

"...as well as his brother Orville, had incredible fortitude and immense character, not to mention incredible bravery...." Read more

"This is a masterful character study of the Wright Brothers--Orville and Wilbur...." Read more

226 customers mention "Family life"226 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's portrayal of the Wright family life. They find it compelling and intimate, describing their perseverance, dedication, family love, and discipline. The book brings the family story to life as a humble, hardworking, God-fearing, supportive family. Readers appreciate the character and discipline of the family.

"...It was wonderful to know that the family had such character and discipline, two traits that seem to be lost in today's culture...." Read more

"...One of the larger themes of the book is the nature and intimacy of the Wright family, particularly Orville, Wilbur and their sister Katherine, as..." Read more

"...It delves deeply into the relationships of the two brothers, Orville and Wilbur, their sister and the father of the Wright family, Other immediate..." Read more

"...It is a done home can't put down book that brings in family and the brothers bicycle shop." Read more

Turn of the 20th Century comes to life, and so do Wilbur, Orville et al
5 out of 5 stars
Turn of the 20th Century comes to life, and so do Wilbur, Orville et al
As a fellow aviation author, this book was inevitably going to be a treat. I daresay the it surpassed even my high expectations.Turn of the 20th Century comes to life, and so do Wilbur, Orville and the other characters in this surprisingly well-detailed and compelling story.Rarely have I found myself lost in a nonfiction book, but this story unfolds as if the reader is living with the brothers in Dayton, milling "flying machine" parts above their bicycle shop and braving the paint-peeling winds and blood-sucking mosquito hordes of Kitty Hawk.The reader learns so much in a short and entertaining span, such as the tribulations of simply traveling through 1900 America, and the fact that the brothers were not credited for their famed 1903 powered flight until several years later—after enduring not only skepticism but ridicule. But, in the end, we cheer to find out, our heroes are fully exonerated, and even the haughty French aviators of the time capitulate when they realize that the Brothers had indeed mastered controlled flight and were leap-years ahead of their own inventions.The book drags ever so slightly toward the end, after the Wrights finally resolve all their conflicts, from safe and consistent flight to patent issues to internal family squabblings, but ends on a wonderfully uplifting note—with the very last line drawing a deeply heartfelt tear!Highly recommended for anyone, and especially for the historical or aviation enthusiast.The Last Bush Pilots
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2015
    David McCullough is a master storyteller who has revitalized historical personalities and events for millions of readers and a multitude of viewers of PBS and HBO. The Johnstown Flood; the Roeblings and the Brooklyn Bridge; Teddy Roosevelt and the Panama Canal and Teddy's early years; his vignettes of BRAVE COMPANIONS; his Pulitzer-Prize-winning TRUMAN and JOHN ADAMS; the critical year of the American revolution; American artists in Paris; his American Experience presidents; and much, much more are the historical treasures of our American Clio.

    In THE WRIGHT BROTHERS, once again McCullough projects little known individuals into the pantheon of American heroes. We have all heard and admired the Wright brothers without knowing much about them, assuming that their flying the first engine-propelled plane was recognized as an extraordinary accomplishment then and now. How surprising to learn that the first detailed account of their 1903 Kitty Hawk flight appeared in the January, 1905 edition of GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE.

    At first glance, Wilbur and Orville seem unlikely heroes. Life-long bachelors, they lived with their father and younger sister in Dayton, Ohio. The brothers were, like Truman, voracious readers, though void of 'higher education.' They were hard working, curious tinkerers.
    Early on Wilbur acknowledged that he didn't have the aggressiveness required in business.

    Drawing on thousands of Wright letters and a panoply of other documents, McCullough describes how these two seemingly undistinguished brothers became the Fathers of Flight. They initially made a modest living as job printers before becoming caught up in the bicycle craze. Soon they were selling and then making bicycles at the somewhat expanded Wright Cycle Company.

    Wilbur became intrigued, after the death of a German glider pilot, by how gliders related to the flight of birds. He and then Orville developed a passion for 'bird flight' and 'read up on aeronautics as a physician would read his books.' This culminated in a May 30, 1899 letter to The Smithsonian Institution stating that they were "convinced that human flight is possible and practical." Flight became their passion, despite no formal technical training, nor experience working with others, nor financial backing, except for what they earned from their bicycle company.

    Working diligently during hours not consumed by their bike business, they built a full-sized glider with components costing less than $15. They selected remote Kitty Hawk as the best site to test this glider. It flew, then crashed, and then flew again. Birds were their Baedeker to flight. As Orville expressed it: "Learning the secret of flight from a bird was a good deal like learning the secret of magic from a magician."

    For several years, at Kitty Hawk and Dayton, they tinkered with enhancing their glider, while living on their bicycle business revenue. They related their study of birds to determining the appropriate wing curvature. This required them to build a wind tunnel where they tested 38 wing surfaces. Years later an AERONAUTICAL JOURNAL article stated that "Never in the history of the world had men studied the problem with such scientific skill nor with such undaunted courage."

    At times their flying passion was interrupted by the necessity of making more bikes. In 1902, after nearly 1,000 glider flights, 'they only had to build a motor.' Charlie Taylor, their bike mechanic, built a motor with an aluminum block in which he crafted the cylinders and cast iron pistons. The brothers worked out the pitch for their clockwise and counterclockwise propellers. On March 23, 1903, they applied to the U. S. Patent Office for a patent on their flying machine.

    In the fall of 1903 they tested their flying machine, "Flyer," at Kitty Hawk. Crashes required new designs before, on December 17th, Orville flew 120 feet in 12 seconds. After Wilbur bested these records, a gust of wind destroyed Flyer, which was then stored in Dayton, never to fly again. The brothers' total 1900-1903 cost for travel and materials was less than $1,000, financed by their bike business.

    Their historic flights were a media nonevent. Newsmen seemed highly skeptical that such a flight had occurred. A notification to the War Department went unanswered. The brothers kept tinkering to enhance their flying machine with a better motor, wings, and operating devices. Their flights and occasional crashes attracted no media attention. The first accurate account appeared in the January, 1905 edition of GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURES. A copy of this article sent to SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN was ignored. A year later SA published "The Wright Aeroplane and the Fabled Performances," which was undisguised skepticism.

    The Wrights kept flying at Huffman Prairie near Dayton. Some British officers stopped by to observe. Wilbur was again stiffed by the War Department and chose not to prursue the matter. 1905 was a breakthrough year with Flyer III. Finally the brothers' accomplishments received growing attention domestically and abroad. The French sought to sign a significant flying machine contract. On April 7, 1906, SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN published a laudatory article, "The Wright Aeroplane and Its Performances."On May 22, 1906, the patent for the Wright Flying Machine was approved.

    In 1906 Wilbur went to Europe to discuss contracts with the French and others. Flyer III was shipped over, but never uncrated. Orville, sister Katharine, and mechanic Charlie Taylor joined him for what seemed like a European fling for this Dayton foursome. Wilber demonstrated an uncommon knowledge of art and architecture and visited the Louvre sixteen time. The business discussions seemed unresolved. As Wilbur returned to the U. S., he expressed the intention to "getting more machines ready for the spring trade."

    After not having flown for 2 1/2 years, Wilbur and Orville had a busy 1908 flying program. Reporters swarmed to observe the U. S. and European flights. Some of the flights related to a War Department interest in a $25,000 contract and serious French interest. The new Flyer was modified to accommodate two operators. Despite setbacks (the Flyer III, still crated in France, was crushed and Wilbur had to meticulously rebuild it), Wilbur captivated Europe with his spectacular flights. Various foreign governments were interested in contracts. Kings and queens, as well as J. P. Morgan and other dignitaries, flocked to his exhibitions.

    Wilbur trained three French aviators, received gold medals, and was lauded by the French minister of public works: "Mr. Wright is a man who has never been discouraged even in the face of hesitation and suspicion. The brothers Wright have written their names in human history as inventors of pronounced genius." Orville was setting world records at Fort Myer. His triumphs were marred by a crash in which the passenger was killed and Orville was badly injured. Towards the end of the year. there were big receptions for the Wright brothers in New York and in Dayton.

    While constructing a new plane for the Fort Myers trials, the brothers went to Washington for a day to receive a medal from President Taft on June 10, 1909, before rushing back to Dayton. The Wright brothers continued to establish spectacular flying records. The Wright Company business improved with a $35,000 War Department contract and far more from the French.

    The Wright brothers had sparked massive competition domestically and abroad. The French had fifteen factories building planes, while Glenn Curtiss had established the rival Curtiss Company to construct flying machines. The brothers seemed less concerned about competition than by patent infringement. They filed nine patent suits and pursued them with a vengeance. As McCullough described it: "It was their reputation at stake that mattered most." Eventually they won every case in the American courts.

    Wilbur last flew in June, 1911. His focus was on Wright Company business and the patent suits. He died on May 30, 1912 at age 45. Orville ceased flying in 1918, sold the Wright Company, and established the Wright Aeronautical Laboratory, where he intended to continue his tinkering. Various museums were established to honor the Wright brothers' accomplishments. Charles Lindbergh came to Dayton in 1927 to pay his respects to Orville.Orville died on January 30, 1948 at age 77. Neil Armstrong took a small swatch of muslin from the wing of the 1903 Flyer to the moon.

    These two Dayton boys, through their passion, grit, extraordinary creative thinking, and uncommon tinkering, created modern-day flying. It took years for their accomplishments to be recognized. I wonder what might have occurred, if they had been driven by the business aggressiveness that Wilbur earlier had rejected. According to one source, there was not a single American-made combat plane that fought in World War 1. My father, in the Aviation Section of the U. S. Signal Corps, was one of the pilots who flew hand-me-down French SPADs. His diary recorded many training crashes. A severe crash invalided him out of WW1. After serving with the Eighth Air Force in World War 11, he was transferred to Wright Airfield in Dayton.
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2015
    McCullough has written a serious and riveting review of the lives of Wilbur and Orville. His writing style is concise, thorough, and unpretentious. I was able to read it easily and enjoyably and learned many things about the Wright family that I didn’t know. The book was thus valuable to me.

    FAMILY

    McCullough makes it clear that the Wilbur and Orville were a product of their family environment. Their father was the major influence. Milton Wright was a minister and finally a bishop in the United Brethren Church in Christ.

    McCullough writes — “He was an unyielding abstainer, which was rare on the frontier, a man of rectitude and purpose— all of which could have served as a description of Milton himself and Wilbur and Orville as well.”

    His strict values molded and focused the views of the three younger Wrights (Katherine, Wilbur, and Orville). In addition to his strictness, he was a true classical liberal in his beliefs in the scientific method and equal rights for all people, no matter their race or gender. For example, Milton wrote to his sons when they were in Paris trying to get support for their flying machine: “Sons—Be men of the highest types personally, mentally, morally, and spiritually. Be clean, temperate, sober minded, and great souled.” As grown, experienced, and highly successful inventors, they responded: “Father — All the wine I have tasted since leaving home would not fill a single wine glass. I am sure that Orville and myself will do nothing that will disgrace the training we received from you and Mother.”

    McCullough writes — “Years later, a friend told Orville that he and his brother would always stand as an example of how far Americans with no special advantages could advance in the world. ‘But it isn’t true,’ Orville responded emphatically, ‘to say we had no special advantages . . . the greatest thing in our favor was growing up in a family where there was always much encouragement to intellectual curiosity.’ ”

    BUSINESS

    McCullough records Wilbur’s thoughts on being in business in a letter to his brother Lorin in 1894:
    “In business it is the aggressive man, who continually has his eye on his own interest, who succeeds. … There is nothing reprehensible in an aggressive disposition, so long as it is not carried to excess, for such men make the world and its affairs move. . . . I entirely agree that the boys of the Wright family are all lacking in determination and push. That is the very reason that none of us have been or will be more than ordinary businessmen. … We ought not to have been businessmen.”
    In 1911, Wilbur wrote:
    “When we think what we might have accomplished if we had been able to devote this time [fighting patent infringement suits] to experiments, we feel very sad, but it is always easier to deal with things than with men, and no one can direct his life entirely as he would choose.”

    The Wrights never built, or even tried to build, an industrial empire as Ford or Edison or their Dayton neighbors John and Frank Patterson (National Cash Register) had done. The Wrights were intellectual men and women.

    ENGINEERING

    McCullough's book is quite light on technical discussions. But the Wrights' unique approach to technology development is the essence of who they were and why they were such successful engineers when others better funded, better educated, and better connected failed. For example, McCullough ignored the following examples.

    Wilbur and Orville were superb engineers, though neither went beyond high school. They found by trial and error that the existing data held by the science of aeronautics was flawed even though its principles were generally correct. They zeroed in on weight, power, control, lift, and the propeller as the main technologies that had to be solved. What is so astounding is not just that they solved these technical problems and reduced them to practice, but that they did it in record time. In a matter of three years, they invented or reinvented virtually the whole field of aeronautics. For example, the wind tunnel had been invented thirty years before, but Wilbur and Orville developed it into a precise quantitative instrument. With it, they developed not just the wing configurations, but coupled with the understanding that a propeller is simply a wing on a rotating shaft, they rewrote the rules of propeller design and optimized its efficiency dramatically. These two men had an insight into, and a reverence for, quantitative empirical data that was unique in aeronautical engineering at that time.

    McCullough shows how that reverence for truth (data) grew out of their family standards. But there was more to it than the principles of a strict Protestant upbringing. It also has to do with time and place. The late 1800s and early 1900s was a period of great minds applying the rules of The Enlightenment and the experience of science to practical problems. The place was an industrial axis, which was anchored by Dayton and Detroit and included Flint, Toledo, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and many other cities in the Midwest. This is where Edison, Ford, Dow, Firestone, the Patterson Brothers, and the Wright Brothers lived and created their technologies. There was a culture of boundless innovation and an infrastructure that included materials and support equipment that fostered great invention. It was similar in many ways to Silicon Valley today.

    REINFORCE THE NARRATIVE

    Another area that could be strengthened in the book is its niche. There has been so much written about the Wrights that each new book needs to distinguish itself in some way with a different point of view, a new set of facts, or a fresh interpretation of old facts.

    For example, McCullough writes — “In early 1889, while still in high school, Orville started his own print shop in the carriage shed behind the house, and apparently with no objections from the Bishop. Interested in printing for some while, Orville had worked for two summers as an apprentice at a local print shop. He designed and built his own press using a discarded tombstone, a buggy spring, and scrap metal.”

    That last sentence about building his own printing press defines so much about Orville and his simple pragmatism. To reinforce that point requires some expansion of that event or similar other defining events in the lives of Wilbur and Orville. I wanted to read more about Orville's compulsive act of invention, but it wasn't there.

    The 81 photos McCullough includes in his book are treasures. Many of them are familiar, but so many are new looks at the Wrights. I wish there were greatly expanded captions below each photo, for each one is a story in itself.

    One source of knowledge about the Wrights’ approach to aeronautics is the Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton. It is normally overshadowed by the more popular Air and Space Museum in Washington, but the exhibits at the Air Force Museum walk you through the Wrights’ engineering exploits with a degree of detail and insight I have found nowhere else.
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  • lorenzo N
    5.0 out of 5 stars I like it!
    Reviewed in Italy on January 18, 2023
    At school I have always heard quickly few words about these brothers and nobody was able to give me deeper informations about their lifes.. recently I have took some times on reserch and luckily I have found this book. I like the way is written and it really inspires me.
  • Pasi Pakkala
    5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting book to read
    Reviewed in Germany on August 12, 2022
    Book of well written and very worth reading for anyone interested in biographies, technological development and flying.
  • R Helen
    5.0 out of 5 stars American geniuses!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 7, 2018
    David McCullough is just a great writer. He can turn any mundane topic into something fascinating. And he did it again with "The Wright Brothers." I don't really have an interest in aviation and I'm not sure why I even picked up the book, except that I figured if McCullough wrote it, it must be good. And it is. McCullough tells the story of two all-American boys who, through an incredible amount of work, effort, and ambition, invented the first real airplane. And they did this with just an amateur knowledge of science and technology. The story is truly inspiring.

    Two things surprised me, though. One was the anti-semitism that their sister expressed when hearing of Hart Berg, the reprentative of Flint and Company, who would eventually reprensent them, and two, was their fates in the end. Somehow both these elements seemed out of character. The Wright Brothers, themselves, were peculiar, however. It seems neither ever had as much as a girlfriend, at least from the story McCullough tells, and one has to wonder why that was. They lived at home their entire lives, along with their sister, who likewise seems to have avoided the opposite sex for most of her life. McCullough doesn't dwell on this, but it does seem a bit strange. But I suppose genius is often found in madness.

    But it's a truly fascinating, incredibly American tale, and well worth a read.
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  • V. Imedio
    5.0 out of 5 stars Espléndido
    Reviewed in Spain on November 1, 2017
    La historia de los hermanos Wright es interesantísima, y el autor la cuenta de forma inmejorable. Su descripción de la personalidad de los hermanos, especialmente Wilbur, de las condiciones en las que trabajaban produce en el lector tal simpatía hacia ellos que se convierten en amigos, y uno se alegra con sus éxitos con la misma sencillez que tenían ellos.
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  • Unknown
    5.0 out of 5 stars Put your head down and follow your passions.......you could change the world
    Reviewed in India on October 2, 2016
    The world relies on the expertise, the brilliance and the contribution of a few extra-ordinary men. Wright brothers, the inventors of modern day aircrafts fall in that category. For some of us in India, we had heard of them, but knew little about their motivations, their background, what made them succeed, what were the challenges that they overcame and what were some of the other factors that made them what they are.

    Wright Brothers is an easy to read biography of Wilbur and Orville Wright written by David McCullough. It brings the characters to life. For me the following stood out:

    1. The intense intellectual curiosity of the two brothers stands out. The author seems to suggest that it was their environment that triggerred their curiosity in flying i.e., by a toy, they played with as children and growing up in a home with books on science. Interestingly, intellectual curiosity is a quality that US universities claim to look for in applicants.
    2. Wright brothers did not go to great US universities. Nor were they born into a family of privilege. They were self made men. They spent a fraction of money spent by some other much better funded groups, who despite the funding and support from the very best failed. However, what they had was passion, attention to detail, looking at things carefully and making incremental changes constantly. As you read the book, these qualities come through loud and clear.
    3. They are men of great determination and tenacity. Year after year, they travel to Kitty Hawk (a remote part of North Carolina) where they overcome mosquitoes and inclement weather, set up a base, assemble prototypes, experiment and successfully fly a plane.
    4. Successfully flying a plane is not enough. US Government repeatedly rejects them and show little interest in helping them. No surprises that innovation has an inverse relationship with bureaucracy. However, the brothers do not give up and ultimately, the world recognises them.
    5. The success of the Wright Brothers is also about strong family tie. Their father and sister whole heartedly support them in their endeavours through thick and thin.
    6. Their success also illustrates the importance of hiring high quality professional manager.....their aircraft hobby was funded by their bicycle business.....while they were away focussing on experiments with aircrafts, a professional manager ran their bicycle business.

    On the shortcomings of the book, they is a lack of technical detail e.g., what is not clear is how did bicycle experts acquire the expertise to design an engine to fly a plane. Also not very clear is why they succeeded and why did the other dreamers fail.

    All in all a good and a very inspiring book to read. I recommend it.