<P>Sheehan and Westfall paint a picture of the history of this rare phenomenon through this year&#39;s transit as well as that of June 5-6 2012. They interweave a discussion of its scientific significance with the stories of the people who went to great lengths to be a part of its legacy such as Jeremiah Horrocks the first known viewer of the transit who began his observations a whole day early in case of inaccurate calculations; Captain James Cook who sailed halfway around the world just to take a viewing party to an advantageous point on the globe keeping his crew healthy on the long voyage by tricking them into eating sauerkraut; and Jean Chappe d&#39;Auteroche who paid the ultimate price to see Venus&#39;s tiny silhouette. A background in the history of astronomy is also provided from the experiments of the ancients through the Copernican revolution to using radar to determine astronomical distances.</P>