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Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (New York Review Books Classics)

Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (New York Review Books Classics)
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Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (New York Review Books Classics) Features

ISBN13: 9781590172735
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Additional Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (New York Review Books Classics) Information

George R. Stewart’s classic study of place-naming in the United States was written during World War II as a tribute to the varied heritage of the nation’s peoples. More than half a century later, Names on the Land remains the authoritative source on its subject, while Stewart’s intimate knowledge of America and love of anecdote make his book a unique and delightful window on American history and social life.

Names on the Land is a fascinating and fantastically detailed panorama of language in action. Stewart opens with the first European names in what would later be the United States—Ponce de León’s flowery Florída, Cortés’s semi-mythical isle of California, and the red Rio Colorado—before going on to explore New England, New Amsterdam, and New Sweden, the French and the Russian legacies, and the unlikely contributions of everybody from border ruffians to Boston Brahmins. These lively pages examine where and why Indian names were likely to be retained; nineteenth-century fads that gave rise to dozens of Troys and Athens and to suburban Parksides, Brookmonts, and Woodcrest Manors; and deep and enduring mysteries such as why “Arkansas” is Arkansaw, except of course when it isn’t.

Names on the Land will engage anyone who has ever wondered at the curious names scattered across the American map. Stewart’s answer is always a story—one of the countless stories that lie behind the rich and strange diversity of the USA.

 

What Customers Say About Names on the Land: A Historical Account of Place-Naming in the United States (New York Review Books Classics):

And he reveals the naming processes, from adopting Indian appellations to names of explorers, to descriptions of events that took place there, to artificially contrived names, to names that evolved, to names brought from abroad -- in other words, the whole gamut of naming places. Behind every name there's a story and Stewart's tome is a staggering monument of scholarship. One can only imagine the time and resources he put into this book which tells the origin of many of the place names that today are so familiar. Stewart's telling of the story behind so many names adds a new and pleasureable dimension to American history. This is a book you read slowly, savoring the names on the land as they tell their story.

I love American history also but this book didn't cut the mustard for me. Truly a record to get two losers at the same time. Quite a disappointment, actually two of them since the book I ordered at the same time, How the States Got Their Shapes, was disappointing also. I think it may have gotten better if I had stayed with it but I had had enough. I disliked this book so much I stopped reading it. Very boring which is a shame since I am normally interested in this subject. Sorry there aren't many reasons given to backup my review. It was such a forgettable book, to me, I simply forgot them.

If you ever want to know how American cities and towns got their names, this is the place to go. My husband and I both have really enjoyed looking through this book and plan to take it on trips.

What a wonderful book. And such a pleasure to learn where the names of places come from. A great find.

The author starts with the blank canvas of the American landscape, before recorded history, and describes how a place becomes a name.The book is arranged chronologically, so the reader moves from pre-history to native Americans to colonists; and from the edges of the country (like Florida, California and New Mexico) to the middle regions; and from colonial governmental debates on names to the Congressional debates on state names in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. I learned so much from this book. The information about the place names comes at the reader not as a dry history lesson, but almost as an epic novel in which the main character is the landscape, and the minor characters are the natives, the immigrants, the politicians, the storytellers. When I purchased it, I thought it might be like an annotated dictionary of sorts -- perhaps in alphabetical order, so that I could look up Topeka or New York. But it's not like that at all. The prose is spare and compelling. The depth of research is mind-boggling.This is a book to be read, re-read and referred to for the rest of your life, especially if you are a traveller or a proud American.

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