Pilsner: How the Beer of Kings Changed the World
Chicago Review Press, 2020. Paperback. New softcover in glossy printed wraps. Text is clean and free of marks or underlining. Includes bibliography, index, and photos. 304 pp. Best Book at the North American Guild Beers Writers
Fast shipping in a secure book box mailer with tracking. New. Item #101144
ISBN: 9781641601825
On the night of April 17, 1945, Allied planes dropped more than a hundred bombs on the Burghers' Brewery in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia, destroying much of the birthplace of pilsner, the world's most popular beer style and the bestselling alcoholic beverage of all time.
Still, workers at the brewery would rally so they could have beer to toast their American, Canadian, and British liberators the following month. It was another twist in pilsner's remarkable story, one that started in a supernova of technological, political, and demographic shifts in the mid-1800s and that continues to unfold today anywhere alcohol is sold.
Tom Acitelli's Pilsner: How the Beer of Kings Changed the World tells that story, shattering myths about pilsner's very birth and about its immediate parentage.
A character-driven narrative that shows how pilsner influenced everything from modern-day advertising and marketing to immigration to today's craft beer movement. .Price: $9.95