The Martians
The Martians by David Baron
Wednesday, November 12 at 6:30pm
Book signing to follow talk from 7:30-8:15pm
$12 for Adults, $8 for Students/Youth/Military/Seniors
听

A mere century ago, Martians were thought to be real鈥攏ot fictional鈥攃reatures. 鈥淢ars is inhabited by a highly civilized and intelligent race of beings,鈥 proclaimed听Alexander Graham Bell after astronomers discovered what looked like irrigation canals on the red planet. When Nikola Tesla, in 1899, set up an experimental laboratory in Colorado Springs and detected radio signals that he believed came from Mars, an all-out craze swept society. You could read about the Martians in听The New York Times, hear of them in Sunday sermons, and see them depicted on the Broadway stage. Biologists debated whether the aliens were winged or gilled. Inventors devised schemes for communicating with Mars. Philosophers and theologians proposed questions Earth might ask its older, wiser neighbor.
Best-selling Boulder author David Baron spent seven years investigating this strange case of mass delusion. In his fast-paced, highly illustrated talk鈥攆illed with period photographs and depictions of the putative Martians themselves鈥攈e reveals what the episode says about the human mind: The fallibility of our senses, the power of belief, and the lure of sensationalism. It is a tale both cautionary and uplifting. Although the Martians never were real, the excitement about them was genuine and world-changing, for it sparked a new genre called science fiction and helped launch us into space鈥攖oward Mars.
听
, an award-winning journalist and broadcaster, is author of听The Martians: The True Story of an Alien Craze That Captured Turn-of-the-Century America. A former science correspondent for NPR and Chair in Astrobiology at the Library of Congress, he has written for the听New York Times,听Wall Street Journal,听Washington Post, and other outlets. His popular TED Talk, about his passion for chasing solar eclipses, has been viewed more than two million times.
听
听
Book sales provided by .
听