Author Talk, Tim Queeney, "Rope: How a Bundle of Twisted Fibers Became the Backbone of Civilization"

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Program Type:

Author Event

Age Group:

Adults
  • Registration is required for this event.
  • Registration will close on May 6, 2026 @ 7:00pm.

Program Description

Event Details

Attention boating enthusiasts! 

Darien Library welcomes author Tim Queeney, who will talk about his new book, "Rope: How a Bundle of Twisted Fibers Became the Backbone of Civilization."

In Rope, Queeney takes readers on a ride through the history of rope and the way it weaves itself through the story of civilization. From Magellan’s world-circling ships, to the 15th-century fleet of Admiral Zheng He, to Polynesian multihulls with crab claw sails, he shows how without rope, none of their adventurous voyages and discoveries would have been possible. Time traveling, he describes the building of the pyramids, the Roman Coliseum, Hagia Sofia, Notre Dame, the Sultan Hasan Mosque, the Brooklyn Bridge, and countless other constructions that would not have been possible without rope.

Not content to just look at rope’s past, he looks at its present and possible future and how the re-invention of rope with synthetic fibers will likely provide the strength for cables to support elevators into space. Making the story of rope real for readers, Queeney tells remarkable nautical stories of his own reliance on rope at sea. Rope is history, adventure, and the story of one of the world’s most common tools that has made it possible for humans to advance throughout the centuries.

About the Author

It suffices to say that Tim Queeney knows the ropes. His the founder and former editor of Ocean Navigator, a magazine for offshore voyagers, which has its roots right here in Darien. Tim's work has appeared in Professional Mariner, American History, and Aviation History magazines. He has had short stories published in the crime anthology Landfall, Best New England Crime Stories 2018 and in the speculative fiction anthology A Land Without Mirrors

Tim grew up in Stamford but now calls Cape Elizabeth, Maine, home, with his wife and rescue dog, Frankie. A life-long sailor, he has taught celestial navigation, radar navigation and coastal piloting ashore and at sea — where he tied plenty of knots and handled many a rope.

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