I REALLY enjoy sitting outside with my pipe and reading, but sometimes I get a bit behind on these posts... I recently finished reading what will be the last "pipe book" of the year. My picture shows late Fall grass, but today, the ground is white. Anyway...
"A Popular History of Astronomy During the Nineteenth Century" by Agnes M Clerke, 1893
Agnes Clerke was a highly respected astronomy writer of the late 19th, early 20th, century. VERY well researched and written for an educated popular audience.
A couple of takeaways I got from this book... Although it's written as a history, since the 19th century had seven years yet to go, much of it is recent (for then) research. Clerke can go on for pages with detailed observations, especially concerning spectroscopy, some of which were significant, some of which fell by the wayside. Most of them later tied together into a more coherent, meaningful, understanding. But this is how scientific research works, and still does.
Another fun take... When she reported Schiaparelli's observations of what became known as Martian canals, Clerke reported observations and takes of a number of prominent, respected astronomers, but no mention of the most famous promoter of Martian canals, Percival Lowell. This is because Lowell didn't develop his interest until 1894.
