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OverviewWhat if every invention was really a prayer? Across five centuries, from the clockwork saints of Renaissance Spain to the resurrection industries of Silicon Valley, Crazy History: The Museum of the Impossible traces the secret emotional history of technology-the machines we built not to serve us, but to redeem us. In this sweeping narrative of human longing and intellectual audacity, Bill Johns guides readers through a gallery of failed miracles and luminous delusions. We meet the automaton monk who prayed flawlessly but felt nothing; the dreamers who built perpetual motion engines as acts of devotion; the cryonic visionaries who froze their dead in faith, not science; and the digital prophets who promised immortality through code. Each exhibit reveals a single pattern repeated through centuries of innovation: the refusal to accept that meaning must perish with the body. Blending meticulous historical research with moral philosophy and the texture of narrative nonfiction, Johns writes with the clarity of a historian and the gravity of a theologian. His prose inhabits the liminal space between faith and function, showing how every breakthrough conceals a confession. The machines of the impossible were never mistakes-they were metaphors, built to remind us that the soul of invention is not mastery but mercy. At the book's heart stands the imagined museum itself, a vast cathedral of human failure and persistence. Its halls contain every attempt to outwit entropy: aether mirrors, time machines, and the black server of the digital afterlife. As the centuries unfold, the museum becomes a mirror for civilization-a place where the bright arrogance of progress yields to the quiet endurance of care. By the final pages, the reader understands that the light illuminating these rooms is not powered by electricity but by attention itself-the light that never turns off. Part cultural history, part moral meditation, Crazy History: The Museum of the Impossible speaks to the engineers and artists, believers and skeptics, who have all, in their own ways, tried to transcend disappearance. Johns's vision is both haunting and restorative: a testament to the strange grace of human imperfection, and to the possibility that our greatest inventions were never meant to work-they were meant to be remembered. This is a book about the faith that hides inside the machine-and the light that endures when the power is gone. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bill JohnsPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.422kg ISBN: 9798272189080Pages: 314 Publication Date: 29 October 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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