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Tesla: Inventor of the Modern
Tesla: Inventor of the Modern
Tesla: Inventor of the Modern
Audiobook9 hours

Tesla: Inventor of the Modern

Written by Richard Munson

Narrated by Charles Constant

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this audiobook

Nikola Tesla, a Serbian immigrant, invented the radio, the induction motor, the neon lamp, and the remote control. His breakthrough came in alternating current, the basis of the electric grid and long-distance electrical transmission. This pitted him against Thomas Edison's direct current empire, and bitter patent battles ensued. But Tesla's technology was superior, and eventually he prevailed. Unfortunately, he had no business sense and could not capitalize on this success. His most advanced ideas were unrecognized for decades: forty years in the case of the radio patent; longer still for his ideas on laser beam technology.

Tesla's personal life was magnificently bizarre. Strikingly handsome and impeccably dressed, he was germophobic and never shook hands. He required nine napkins when he sat down to dinner. In later years he ate only white food and conversed with the pigeons in Bryant Park. This clear, authoritative, and highly readable biography takes account of all phases of this remarkable life.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 19, 2018
ISBN9781684412051
Tesla: Inventor of the Modern

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Reviews for Tesla

Rating: 4.14062496875 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Real pleasure to losten to. Very detailed, factual, unbiased but also thrilling.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Have the print copy of this title, and have been a long time documentary watcher of the man Tesla. I think this does a great job at showing some of the lesser known characteristics of the man, making him much more relatable and unrelateable in many ways.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Disappointing -- very slow and tedious biography of Nikola Tesla, focusing mainly on his financial problems and feuds with other inventors of the era.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    This book is so disappointing that I abandoned it. Credibility is crucial in a biography. To be worth a reader's time, an author needs to demonstrate reliability as a researcher of general facts to convince her or his audience of meticulous research into the facts of the subject's life.Munson fails this first test of authority. Some examples:page 30 - Munson sends someone off on another tact. At best this is careless; the worse alternative is that he does not grasp a common nautical metaphor.page 49 - We read a reference to 'the Royal Canadian Government'. There has never been such an entity, and certainly not in the time period of this book.page 62 - Munson refers to King Edward VII at a time when Edward was still Prince of Wales.page 91 - The electrical engineer Ambrose Fleming was not 'an aristocrat' and was not knighted until 1929, long after the time in question.pages 253 and 254 - Munson uses 'friars' and 'monks' as synonyms. They are not.Given the number of errors in the first hundred pages, and the later one I stumbled across, I felt that there was little reason to suppose that Munson's research into Tesla's life was reliable.My suggestion is to look instead for W. Bernard Carlson's "Tesla : inventor of the modern".
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Nikola Tesla has become a Culture Icon known more for his reputation as a kind of magician and rogue inventor, thanks to the movie The Prestige, and as a visionary, his name recognized because of Tesla Motors. And yet few of us understand that everything we take for granted today--the electric grid, cell phones, satellite television, the Internet, the smartwatch, and even the remote control of warfare--first sprung from his imagination.I knew Tesla from bits and pieces. I remember when my son and husband bantered about things looking like a 'Tesla coil,' a reference to a weapon in Command and Conquer Red Alert. The 2006 movie The Prestige showed Tesla's Colorado laboratory and work in remote transmission of electricity.In 2016 I read The Last Days of Night by Graham Moore, an exciting historical novel about the rivalry between George Westinghouse and Thomas Edison, with Tesla in the center. In The Devil in the White City by Eric Larson and The Electrifying Fall of Rainbow City by Margaret Creighton I learned about the Chicago and Buffalo fairs lit by Tesla and George Westinghouse.And then, in my mailbox, I found a gift from W. W. Norton-- a copy of Richard Munson's biography Tesla: Inventor of the Modern. I was pleased to have all these bits and pieces of knowledge integrated into an understanding and appreciation of Tesla's life and work and legacy.The more I learned about the man, the less I felt I 'knew' him. He was brilliant and flawed and complicated and chimerical. He worked out entire inventions in his mind before he built them. He was impeccably dressed and amazingly fit-- and a charming germaphobe who could not be touched. His obsessive-compulsive disorder ruled his habits and he fought depression with self-administered electroshock therapy. He was a lousy businessman who signed away his rights to millions and later, deep in debt, lost his research facilities. He could be vain and he could be magnanimous. He was addicted to the pure science of discovery. "The War of the Currents" refers to the rivalry between inventors vying for precedence. Thomas Edison clung to direct current, which could not be transmitted over long distances and relegated electric power to the rich few. Tesla invented alternating current capable of powering whole regions. With George Westinghouse using Tesla's inventions, in 1893 they created the City of Lights at the Chicago Columbian Expedition. The commission to harness the power of Niagara Falls attracted worldwide attention. Westinghouse and Tesla won the contract and in 1896 the hydroelectric power plant at Niagara Falls was opened, powering the Rainbow City at the 1901 Pan-American Expedition in Buffalo, NY. Tesla saw the feat as signifying "the subjugation of natural forces to the service of man" that would "relieve millions from want and suffering."Tesla had reached superstar status, but already he was envisioning the next big idea.At the turn of the century, gas lamps still reigned, with only 8% of American homes wired for electricity. The question remained to be answered:"Was electricity for all or for the wealthy? Would power become a necessity or remain a luxury?" Tesla was obsessed with the idea of using the earth for the transference of wireless electric power.He went on to invent remote control and multichannel broadcasting systems. Tesla had little interest in creating and marketing useful devices based on his discoveries. He rejected an offer to develop wireless communication for the US Lighthouse Board and other projects which would have financed his research.Next up, he built a research center in Colorado, portrayed in the movie The Prestige in which David Bowie plays Tesla in Colorado puttering around with wireless energy. His last facility on Long Island, NY went far over budget. Tesla was broke. He lost backers who wanted practical applications, something they could make money on, and Tesla was only interested in pure research. It was heartbreaking to read about Tesla's untethered last years, his increasing eccentricities in behavior and poverty, as he watched other make millions on his ideas and inventions. Munson offers Tesla as a role model, writing, "...we have great need today of Tesla's example of selfless out-of-the-box thinking if we are to tackle our twenty-first-century challenges...particularly in the electric-power industry he helped create." Munson continues, "he would lead a charge for sustainability and against the carbon pollution that is changing our climate." He knew that coal was a limited supply and imagined harnessing energy from the sun and geothermal energy.Tesla was one of the most interesting and remarkable men I have read about. I appreciate that Munson's explanations of Tesla's discoveries and inventions were written so the general reader could grasp them.