Fine Print: A Story about Johann Gutenberg

Front Cover
Millbrook Press, Jan 1, 2011 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 64 pages

Although he is credited with changing history through his invention of printing, Johann Gutenberg remains mysterious. In Fine Print, author Joann Johansen Burch pieces together Gutenberg's amazing story. When Johann was a child in the early 1400s, books were rare and sometimes very expensive. Each book had to be copied by hand, letter by letter. Gutenberg loved to read, and he often grew impatient waiting for the time-consuming bookmaking process to be completed. Young Gutenberg dreamed of finding a better way to make books. From his childhood in strife-torn Mainz through the many years of setbacks and bankruptcies, Gutenberg persevered in his belief that books could be made quickly and inexpensively. This is the story of the man who invented movable type and the printing press and gave the world the gift of books.

 

Contents

Authors Note
6
New Terms
7
A Long Cold Winter
11
Finding a Way
23
A Secret Workshop
29
Johann Shares His Secret
39
Making It Work
49
Betrayed
57
SourcesFor Further Reading
64
Back Cover
66
Copyright

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