Transit Maps of the World by Mark Ovenden: Book Cover
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Transit Maps of the World by Mark Ovenden, Mike Ashworth (Editor)

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: October 2007
  • 144pp
  • Sales Rank: 27,811
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2007
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Paperback, 144pp
    • Sales Rank: 27,811

    The Barnes & Noble Review

    What if the planet could one day be circumnavigated by mass transit? Reimagine that familiar flattened map, no longer with continents separated by oceans but rather connected by a network of color-coded lines that would enable a globe-trotter to shuttle from Vancouver to Newark, tunnel under the Atlantic to Rotterdam, check out Tashkent, and then be only a few connections away from Tokyo? This provocative image opens Mark Ovenden's unconventional transit map atlas, and in flipping these pages one sees serious thinking behind its utopian whimsy. A subway not only represents a literal mass movement of commuters but, at some point, involves moving the masses to agreement. Exorbitant enterprises in any era, these transit systems could never have been built without citizens first having grappled with their collective historical, economic, and political bedrock. Many of the earliest systems started in places like New York, where private companies were eager to gamble large fortunes to lay down tracks. Athens and Rome negotiate thousands of years of archaeology, while in Berlin, maps of the divided decades are poignant reminders of the Cold War. Given our polyglot planet, it's amazing to note the near-universal adoption of a graphic Esperanto for these maps, the improbably surreal formula of rainbow spaghetti topped with station names like so many methodically placed olives. Even more astounding: that monolingual tourists around the world manage to use them successfully. While Ovenden's page one vision is clearly an impossibility any time soon, it is thrilling to think that perhaps humankind's primordial wanderlust may ultimately link the world together in ways that neither the United Nations not even the most ambitious telecom networks ever could. --Victoria C. Rowan

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    Synopsis

    Transit Maps of the World is the first and only comprehensive collection of historic and current maps of every rapid-transit system on earth. Using glorious, colorful graphics, Mark Ovenden traces the history of mass transit-including rare and historic maps, diagrams, and photographs, some available for the first time since their original publication. Transit Maps is the graphic designer's new bible, the transport enthusiast's dream collection, and a coffee-table essential for everyone who's ever traveled in a city.

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    Biography

    Mark Ovenden is a writer and broadcaster in London.

    Customer Reviews

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    Transit Maps of the Worldby Anonymous

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    October 20, 2007: Travellers, graphic designers, map geeks and transit enthusiasts will just love this book! A unique idea to combine and compare the maps of 'every urban rail system on earth'. I had no idea how gripping it would be until I started flicking thru. First thing you notice is the hypnotic colors of these things that you usually take for granted when travelling the subway in a different city, second thing is how similar yet uniquely different each one is 'many reflecting the graphic heritage of the nation or region they come from - the Tokyo map for instance is truly beguiling', and the third thing you do is start racing thru the book looking at places you've been or would like to go! Truly eclectic and great fun, Ovenden also gives a never-before-seen preamble about the nature of each metro or subway system and traces the evolution of the maps 'the systems that have been open the longest seem to get the most attention simply because they have had the time to change their style of map many times' Even if you dont think of yourself as a map lover, the layout seems to bring the whole thing to life and you just can't let the book alone. Have been leaving it out in my office ever since I got hold of it and every single person flicks thru looking for their favourite city - well done to Penguin for picking this up, I wouldn't be surprised if this ended up in the Christmas lists as a best-seller, it's just so quirky and captivating!