The Intemperate Engineer: Isambard Kingdom Brunel in His Own Words by Adrian Vaughan - review by Will Robinson

Will Robinson

Napoleon of Engineers

The Intemperate Engineer: Isambard Kingdom Brunel in His Own Words

By

Ian Allan 288pp £19.99
 

No engineer in history has come close to rivalling the fame of Isambard Kingdom Brunel. His career reads like fiction. At nineteen, he worked for his father on the first tunnel to pass beneath the Thames, a feat of engineering still connecting Wapping to Rotherhithe on the East London Line. Before it was even finished, he won a competition to build the Clifton Suspension Bridge. This secured his reputation.

In 1833, aged just twenty-six, Brunel was appointed chief engineer of the Great Western Railway. This was an unlikely break: he possessed little specialist knowledge and had only travelled by train on one occasion. That trip had not impressed him, for he scrawled in his journal: ‘The time

Sign Up to our newsletter

Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.

Follow Literary Review on Twitter