In the grand tradition of the scholar-adventurer, acclaimed author
Richard Cohen takes us around the world to illuminate our relationship
with the star that gives us life. Drawing on more than seven years of
research, he reports from locations in eighteen different countries. As
he soon discovers, the Sun is present everywhere--in mythology,
language, religion, politics, sciences, art, literature, and medicine,
even in the ocean's depths. For some ancient worshippers, our star was a
man abandoned by his spouse because his brightness made her weary. The
early Christians appropriated the Sun's imagery, with the cross becoming
an emblem of the star and its rays, and the halo a variation of that.
Einstein helped replicate the Sun's power to create the atomic bomb,
while Richard Wagner had Tristan inveigh against daylight as the enemy
of romantic love. In this splendidly illustrated volume packed with
captivating facts, extraordinary myths, and surprising anecdotes, Cohen
not only explains the star that so inspires us, but shows how
multifacted our relationship with it has been--and continues to be.