Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age
Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age book cover

Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age

Hardcover – May 12, 2013

Price
$53.50
Format
Hardcover
Pages
520
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0691057767
Dimensions
6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
Weight
2.18 pounds

Description

From Booklist *Starred Review* Nikola Tesla once noted that the men who worked for him sometimes “thought I was some kind of magician or hypnotizer.” Like Tesla’s assistants, biographer Carlson sees the magician and hypnotizer in the astonishing inventor. Readers, too, will perceive the magic-working wizard in the Serbian-born genius as he translates intensely conceived imaginative ideals into world-changing technologies—such as the alternating-current motor and the radio-controlled boat. And they will recognize something of the hypnotizer in the flamboyant showman who dazzles lecture-hall audiences and potential backers with electric flames passing through his body. Carlson even has something to teach readers familiar with Seifer’s dissection of Tesla’s tortured psyche in Wizard (1996) and O’Neill’s much earlier chronicle of Tesla’s childhood and early career in Prodigal Genius (1944). Carlson provides not only a more detailed explanation of Tesla’s science but also a more focused psychological account of Tesla’s inventive process than do his predecessors. Carlson also surpasses his predecessors in showing how Tesla promoted his inventions by creating luminous illusions of progress, prosperity, and peace, illusions so strong that they finally unhinge their creator. An exceptional fusion of technical analysis of revolutionary devices and imaginative sympathy for a lacerated ego. --Bryce Christensen "Winner of the 2015 Sally Hacker Prize, Society for the History of Technology""Winner of the 2015 IEEE William and Joyce Middleton Electrical Engineering History Award, History Committee of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers""One of Amazon.com’s 2013 Best Science Books""One of Booklist Online’s Top 10 Science & Health Books for 2013""One of Choice's Outstanding Academic Titles for 2013""One of The Guardian’s Best Popular Physical Science Books of 2014, chosen by GrrlScientist""Honorable Mention for the 2013 PROSE Award in Biography & Autobiography, Association of American Publishers""Longlisted for the 2014 Royal Society Winton Prize for Science Books""[An] assiduous, endlessly patient biography. . . . In Carlson's eyes, Tesla's relationship with modernity in all its forms--its fixation with progress and explanation, capital and connection, but also its fragmentation of narrative and self--is more complex and revealing than even the conspiracy nuts have imagined." ---Richard Barnett, London Review of Books "Carlson sheds light on the man and plenty of his inventions. . . . [An] electric portrait." ― Publishers Weekly "Superb. . . . Carlson brings to life Tesla's extravagant self-promotion, as well as his eccentricity and innate talents, revealing him as a celebrity-inventor of the 'second industrial revolution' to rival Thomas Alva Edison." ---W. Patrick McCray, Nature "Soundly footnoted, yet eminently readable, it provides a balanced examination of the man and his work, focusing particularly on Tesla's distinctive style of invention." ― Natural History "Carefully researched and thoughtfully written. . . . Clearly surpassing earlier accounts, [this] will be the gold standard for Tesla biography." ---Thomas J. Misa, Science "A scholarly, critical, mostly illuminating study of the life and work of the great Serbian inventor." ― Kirkus Reviews "Carlson even has something to teach readers familiar with Seifer's dissection of Tesla's tortured psyche in Wizard (2001) and O'Neill's much earlier chronicle of Tesla's childhood and early career in Prodigal Genius (1944). Carlson provides not only a more detailed explanation of Tesla's science but also a more focused psychological account of Tesla's inventive process than do his predecessors. Carlson also surpasses his predecessors in showing how Tesla promoted his inventions by creating luminous illusions of progress, prosperity, and peace, illusions so strong that they finally unhinge their creator. An exceptional fusion of technical analysis of revolutionary devices and imaginative sympathy for a lacerated ego." ---Bryce Christensen, Booklist "This is a fascinating glimpse into the life of a monumental inventor whose impact on our contemporary world is all too unfamiliar to the general public. Carlson relates the science behind Tesla's inventions with a judicial balance that will engage both the novice and the academic alike. Highly recommended to serious biography buffs and to readers of scientific subjects." ---Brian Odom, Library Journal "Carlson deftly weaves the many threads of Tesla's story." ---Nicola Davis, Times "Splendid." ---Jon Turney, Times Higher Education "Run, don't walk, to buy this book for the Nikola Tesla cultist in your life. . . . [Carlson] is the first trained academic historian of technology to approach this topic, and he snaps the intense, romantic Serb back into his proper context." ---Colby Cosh, Maclean's Magazine "Carlson takes a historian's approach to piecing together Tesla's life. He resists the temptation to focus only on Tesla's persona as an eccentric genius with a flair for drama. . . . Instead, Carlson sets out to answer three questions: 'How did Tesla invent? How did his inventions work? And what happened as he introduced his inventions?'" ---Maggie Fazeli Fard, Washington Post "Required reading for any would-be innovator." ---Christine Evans-Pughe, Engineering and Technology "An impressive piece of scholarship." ---Graham Farmelo, Daily Telegraph "Carlson has written an exhaustive biography of Tesla, remarkable for its breadth and thoroughness. He explores and details all his major inventions, providing illustrations and in some cases even reproductions of the patent applications. This is as fair and balanced a biography of Tesla as one could hope for, no mean feat for a man so full of contradictions." ---Gino Segre, Physics in Perspective "Historian Carlson . . . has at last written a balanced and nuanced scholarly treatment of Tesla in the technical and social contexts of his time. . . . Carlson's easy-to-read style and almost flawless exposition of technical matters will make this book attractive for everyone from general readers to engineers and historians. It is well illustrated and indexed with extensive footnotes. This book is likely to become the standard scholarly biography of Tesla for decades to come." ― Choice "Since the death of Nikola Tesla in 1943, his life has deserved a worthy biography. Bernard Carlson has delivered that in Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age , which portrays Tesla as intensely human. . . . Anyone, whether simply an interested reader or a professional historian, engineer, or physicist, will finish Tesla with a deepened understanding of his world, character, and accomplishments." ---Robert Rosenberg, Physics Today "This major biography sheds new light on Tesla's visionary approach to invention and the business strategies behind his most important technological breakthroughs." ― World Book Industry "The author Bernard Carlson has put a herculean effort in presenting a detailed biographical study of one of the greatest engineer-scientists of human history, Nikola Tesla. . . . The book may be treated as a benchmark by future biographers of inventors and scientists." ---Mainak Sengupta, Current Science "It is a very readable work and presents the whole picture of Tesla both as an electrical wizard and as a human being with all the associated foibles. I particularly liked the way Carlson interspersed the narrative with commentary on the inventive process, the role of illusion, and the social implications of his technologies on bringing about positive changes in society as a whole. If you wish to read a factual book about Tesla, this is the one." ---Eric P. Wenaas, IEEE Technology and Society Magazine "[Readers] will certainly see this volume as an indispensable guide to one of the most fascinating yet controversial and misunderstood innovators of the modern era." ---Graeme Gooday, Metascience "[A] masterly study of the man and his work, explaining how business interests as well as scientific curiosity drove Tesla. Carlson shows how engineers, just as much as artists, benefit from creativity, imagination and idealism." ---Roger Backhouse, Journal of the Society of Model & Experimental Engineers "[T]his is an enjoyable biography of Tesla, concentrating in detail on his engineering achievements and business arrangements, even though it could have been firmer on the unscientific nature of some of Tesla's ideas." ---Brian Clegg, Popular Science "The most objective and balanced Tesla biography to date." ---Tibi Puiu, ZME Science " Tesla is a tour de force of sound scholarship and cogent analysis that brings to life one of the most eccentric and enigmatic characters in the history of technology." ---Michael Brian Schiffer, Register of The Kentucky Historical Society "An eminently readable history that, while avoiding hagiography, reconstructs the intellectual development of one of history's great electrical inventors and the social contexts in which he worked." ---Benjamin Gross, Chemical Heritage "Carlson's book is likely the definitive biography of Tesla. It is a challenging read, but a rewarding one. It also contributes in the wider context to the reinvention of scientific biography as a prism of cultural history." ---Guillaume de Syon, Canadian Journal of History "Carlson's book stands out compared with previous Tesla biographies. . . . The result is an eminently readable history that, while avoiding hagiography, reconstructs the intellectual development of one of history's great electrical inventors and the social contexts in which he worked." ---Benjamin Gross, Chemical Heritage "Dr. Carlson has written an outstanding work, exhibiting a true understanding of the complex person who was Nikola Tesla. The book is alternatively uplifting--as it reveals how Tesla's mind worked, creating prototypes of inventions which have changed the world--and heartbreaking. . . . The book is much more than a biography, as Carlson examines the art of invention as it applied to Tesla. He skillfully weaves into the narrative insights as to why Tesla approached his work in the way he did." ---John Bowditch, Technology and Culture "Only the bravest of historians elects to take on the challenge of writing a scholarly biography of Tesla that examines and critiques such fondly cherished myths. And Bernie Carlson is certainly up to this challenge. . . . [A]n indispensable guide to one of the most fascinating yet controversial and misunderstood innovators of the modern era." ---Graeme Gooday, Metascience "[Carlson's] extensive notes on his sources are invaluable for Tesla researchers, and his book sheds light on many misconceptions perpetuated in some popular Tesla biographies." ― Nexus Magazine "The problem for any biographer is that there are really two distinctly different Nikola Teslas. One is the towering genius shunned by the ignorant establishment, whose greatest works are still suppressed; this is the Tesla adored by the alternative science community and the popular media. . . . The other Tesla is the miserable failed inventor whose great plans and endless boasts came to nothing. . . . Carlson manages the impressive feat of steering a middle course between these two." ---David Hambling, Fortean Times "The great strength of Carlson's biography is that, throughout his account of these complex developments, he tries to evaluate Tesla’s work and behaviour without falling into the twin perils of hero-worship or skepticism. . . . Carlson’s biography not only provides us with an account of a man whose achievements amazed the world and contributed significantly to the emergence of the electrical age. It is also provides valuable insights into the way in which innovation can be projected into the popular media and arouse the interest of financiers." ---Peter J. Bowler, European Legacy "Carlson has written a serious, rigorous book grounded in the academic history of technology, but also a page-turner that any fan of Tesla will enjoy." ―Robert MacDougall, Western University "Nikola Tesla, like one of his oscillators, flickered between different states so quickly that they can easily blur. Carlson captures this extraordinary, contradictory life―inventor, futurist visionary, showman, and, at times, ranting narcissist. We get to see how Tesla scrambled like mad, built with ambition, and in his later efforts failed monumentally. Here is a book that guides us through this wild ride with empathy and without hagiography." ―Peter Galison, Harvard University "Combining archival research with the latest scholarship from the history of technology, Carlson has written the balanced, scholarly biography that Nikola Tesla has long deserved. This is the definitive study of his life and work." ―David E. Nye, University of Southern Denmark "Most biographies of Tesla lack technical background and are uncritical and adulatory in their approach. Carlson's perspective as a historian―particularly a historian of technology―is indispensable for understanding Tesla's place in the rapidly changing American society of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His style is engaging and accessible, and the book will clearly be of value to the historical community." ―Bernard S. Finn, curator emeritus, Smithsonian Institution " Tesla is a tour de force of scholarship and analysis. This is the definitive work on Tesla that brings to light much new information about his life, his inventions, and the changing socioeconomic context in which he worked. Carlson has mined the primary sources to an unprecedented depth and breadth. The book is nothing less than extraordinary." ―Michael Brian Schiffer, author of Power Struggles: Scientific Authority and the Creation of Practical Electricity before Edison From the Inside Flap "Carlson has written a serious, rigorous book grounded in the academic history of technology, but also a page-turner that any fan of Tesla will enjoy." --Robert MacDougall, Western University "Nikola Tesla, like one of his oscillators, flickered between different states so quickly that they can easily blur. Carlson captures this extraordinary, contradictory life--inventor, futurist visionary, showman, and, at times, ranting narcissist. We get to see how Tesla scrambled like mad, built with ambition, and in his later efforts failed monumentally. Here is a book that guides us through this wild ride with empathy and without hagiography." --Peter Galison, Harvard University "Combining archival research with the latest scholarship from the history of technology, Carlson has written the balanced, scholarly biography that Nikola Tesla has long deserved. This is the definitive study of his life and work." --David E. Nye, University of Southern Denmark "Most biographies of Tesla lack technical background and are uncritical and adulatory in their approach. Carlson's perspective as a historian--particularly a historian of technology--is indispensable for understanding Tesla's place in the rapidly changing American society of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His style is engaging and accessible, and the book will clearly be of value to the historical community." --Bernard S. Finn, curator emeritus, Smithsonian Institution " Tesla is a tour de force of scholarship and analysis. This is the definitive work on Tesla that brings to light much new information about his life, his inventions, and the changing socioeconomic context in which he worked. Carlson has mined the primary sources to an unprecedented depth and breadth. The book is nothing less than extraordinary." --Michael Brian Schiffer, author of Power Struggles: Scientific Authority and the Creation of Practical Electricity before Edison "Carlson has written a serious, rigorous book grounded in the academic history of technology, but also a page-turner that any fan of Tesla will enjoy." --Robert MacDougall, Western University "Nikola Tesla, like one of his oscillators, flickered between different states so quickly that they can easily blur. Carlson captures this extraordinary, contradictory life--inventor, futurist visionary, showman, and, at times, ranting narcissist. We get to see how Tesla scrambled like mad, built with ambition, and in his later efforts failed monumentally. Here is a book that guides us through this wild ride with empathy and without hagiography." --Peter Galison, Harvard University "Combining archival research with the latest scholarship from the history of technology, Carlson has written the balanced, scholarly biography that Nikola Tesla has long deserved. This is the definitive study of his life and work." --David E. Nye, University of Southern Denmark "Most biographies of Tesla lack technical background and are uncritical and adulatory in their approach. Carlson's perspective as a historian--particularly a historian of technology--is indispensable for understanding Tesla's place in the rapidly changing American society of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His style is engaging and accessible, and the book will clearly be of value to the historical community." --Bernard S. Finn, curator emeritus, Smithsonian Institution " Tesla is a tour de force of scholarship and analysis. This is the definitive work on Tesla that brings to light much new information about his life, his inventions, and the changing socioeconomic context in which he worked. Carlson has mined the primary sources to an unprecedented depth and breadth. The book is nothing less than extraordinary." --Michael Brian Schiffer, author of Power Struggles: Scientific Authority and the Creation of Practical Electricity before Edison W. Bernard Carlson is professor of science, technology, and society in the School of Engineering and Applied Science and professor of history at the University of Virginia. His books include Technology in World History and Innovation as a Social Process: Elihu Thomson and the Rise of General Electric, 1870-1900 . Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The definitive account of Tesla's life and work
  • Nikola Tesla was a major contributor to the electrical revolution that transformed daily life at the turn of the twentieth century. His inventions, patents, and theoretical work formed the basis of modern AC electricity, and contributed to the development of radio and television. Like his competitor Thomas Edison, Tesla was one of America's first celebrity scientists, enjoying the company of New York high society and dazzling the likes of Mark Twain with his electrical demonstrations. An astute self-promoter and gifted showman, he cultivated a public image of the eccentric genius. Even at the end of his life when he was living in poverty, Tesla still attracted reporters to his annual birthday interview, regaling them with claims that he had invented a particle-beam weapon capable of bringing down enemy aircraft.Plenty of biographies glamorize Tesla and his eccentricities, but until now none has carefully examined what, how, and why he invented. In this groundbreaking book, W. Bernard Carlson demystifies the legendary inventor, placing him within the cultural and technological context of his time, and focusing on his inventions themselves as well as the creation and maintenance of his celebrity. Drawing on original documents from Tesla's private and public life, Carlson shows how he was an "idealist" inventor who sought the perfect experimental realization of a great idea or principle, and who skillfully sold his inventions to the public through mythmaking and illusion.This major biography sheds new light on Tesla's visionary approach to invention and the business strategies behind his most important technological breakthroughs.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Electrifying!

Many self-described "Tesla Biographers" have taken a shot at writing a book that would be considered comprehensive and worthy of filling in the gaps of this infamous man's life, but none have done so as well as W. Bernard Carlson.

If you are expecting a light, fluff-filled read about this important inventor, please look elsewhere. This book is intelligent, articulate and technical. If your desire is to make sense of the how and why Tesla ended up where he did by the end of his life, this book will not only elaborate on common knowledge of the subject, but will open your eyes to the unfortunate truth of this genius and his fall from grace, society and his descent into poverty.

What I found fascinating about this book, was that rather than giving in to the previous biographer's desire to make Tesla look like a superhuman celebrity with an external muse that produced his creativity, this book shows the rise to fame through his eyes. His inventions are detailed and his numerous ideas and contributions to science and the field of electrical engineering is presented brilliantly. Rather than going from chapter to chapter saying "and then he did this and then he did that" this work has a very natural progression. Frequently using Tesla's own words to describe his creative process, Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age gives a much more in depth view of his life.

I had always thought of Tesla as having been someone who looked within himself to answer the great questions of life, and this book seems to agree with that notion. As someone who is also rather introspective, I appreciated the idea that Tesla turned to his own mind for answers and created his own circumstances for his early success.

If you are the type of history buff that will get lost in an old black and white photo for minutes at a time, marveling at how things have changed, this author has you covered. There are plenty of photos and diagrams in this book of Tesla, his inventions and his previous places of employment. I was intensely drawn to the photo of Edison's Machine Works and the photo of the inside of the machine shop at Wardenclyffe.

Rather than viewing Nikola Tesla in a celebratory way, this book takes a neutral and impartial stand of the inventor, neither praising nor degrading him for his work nor his decisions. The author has researched and presented material that tells the story of a man from humble beginnings who did many great things, and made some choices that were most regrettable in terms of his own preservation.

After reading this, my opinion is pretty simple. I believe Tesla would be proud of this biography. Perhaps just as proud of this as he would be of the unit of measurement named after him.

While Tesla may not be the household name that Edison has turned out to be, for any serious scholar of the age of invention, he will always be an important contributor to many things that we take for granted as every day convenience today.

I feel this is an important book and one that should be shared with the younger generation. Teachers, parents and anyone who is interested in the history of invention and pioneers of their time would benefit from this book. I thank the author for the hard work and dedication they have shown in writing this.

This review is based on a digital ARC from the publisher.
153 people found this helpful
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The best bio in my opinion.

I've read a lot of Tesla biographies, but this one takes the prize. I haven't quite finished it yet, but find it as 'unputdownable' as any mystery novel. The politics, mystery and intrigues that surrounded Tesla's life are brought to life here, along with a good understanding of electrical technology in general during the subject period. This is not a 'technical' book, but Tesla's major inventions and experiments are covered in sufficient detail and in an easy-to-understand manner. This book is well footnoted for those who whish to dig deeper into the hundreds of references.
87 people found this helpful
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The best biography of Tesla yet written

This is the first truly scholarly biography of one of our most fascinating and controversial inventors. Carlson manages to tell the story clearly and fairly. He also analyses Tesla's inventions and theories very accurately. A must read for anyone interested in this great inventor and his work.
42 people found this helpful
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Tesla, genius unglamorized

Having read O'Neill's, Cheney's and Seifer's biographies of this inventor as well as his Colorado Spring Notes, his patents and patent folders I have found Carlson's work far more revealing of the business interests and cautions surrounding Tesla inventions than had been disclosed by other authors. Tesla's two transcendent inventions, the induction and synchronous AC motor and the use of tuned transmitting and receiving radio circuits, remain in universal use today but they were largely made initially practical by engineers working for Westinghouse and Marconi as Carlson describes. Inventors also come up with completely false creations that are given credibility due to their prior successes. William Shockley, one of the inventors of the transistor, believed Negroes were genetically inferior and Linus Pauling, a founder of genetic engineering, was convinced large doses of vitamin C would cure the common cold. Tesla came up with the broadcast of wireless power, a technical impossibility on the scale he proposed and which was responsible for his disappearance from the public stage and in many technical histories. Such creations are the product, as Carlson points out, of the same mental processes that produce astounding successes and are to be expected. They also attract followers of parapsychology and the occult. Once Tesla has found a practical use for the rotating magnetic field he lost interest and went onto radio. Once he found that he could selectively transmit messages and control functions (his 1898 remotely controlled boat being a seminal example) using circuit tuned to resonate, he lost interest and went on wireless power. And that was where he met his match.

Carlson's history is well written and while, as an electrical engineer, I find his technical descriptions of Tesla inventions better than those provided by prior authors, they still lack clarity and do not fully describe the physical effects at work. Perhaps to fully appreciate these devices requires a reader's exposure to at least a good high school course in physics. The author might also have stressed, though, the absolute importance of the use of tuned circuits in all radio transmission. Without that invention, radio, TV and WiFi would be impossible. He also neglects to mention that Tesla's invention of requiring the simultaneous presence of two radio signals of different frequencies to produce an action, which ensures that extraneous signals can not cause an unwanted action, was cited as prior art by the U.S. Patent Office when some one wanted to patent the AND gate, a circuit fundamental to modern electronic computers. Such is Tesla's legacy. Despite these omissions, I very much recommend this biography to people interested in obtaining a realistic assessment of this genius.
26 people found this helpful
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Balansed, why?

I could not wait any longer for this book to come out and read it. Fifteen years in the making has given significant weight to what the book would be about.
Then, major disappointment. It is all about balanced approach. Why? Nothing about Tesla was balanced. It was extraordinary, exceptional. Out of this world. No need for translation how Tesla developed his discoveries; his patents precisely demonstrate all. Next comes ideals and illusions, and promotions, and many other stereotyping when nothing about Tesla is stereotype.
Tesla was not poor - he had worked in Europe, and provided for himself and his scientific work. He was robed while waiting to board the ship. He was very explicit about it in his interviews, and his letters to his family states the same. Yes, he did come, therefore, without money, but, he was not poor prior to departure on US soil.
Tesla's nervous breakdown, from the letters is 'devastation for lost apparatuses' that he immediately needed, come out of the someone's deliberately set fire in his laboratory.
Why is so hard for people who take responsibility to write books about someone and something to get it authentically, the way originator presented. Twelve decades later, army of scientists work on Tesla papers and patents, yet, nobody has come close to decode his statement: "If you knew the magnificence of 3, 6, and 9, you would have the key to the universe." For, the 'madman'...'eccentric' expressions from his time till now. Has anybody hear from Tesla something like this: "Hmm, these people are so mediocre, limited, so ordinary they are not capable to see what they will need for the future. Oh, my God! I am strange to them feeding pigeons. They can not even grasp it is escape to paradise being in the company of these brilliant birds. One ought to try fitting Tesla's brain power into ordinary cliche."
Chapter sixteen, page 368, first paragraph reads that MIT professor Trump finds Tesla's papers (1943) speculative, philosophical, and promotional. Again, Carlson concludes that ideal and illusions have been fundamentals to Tesla's work. Now, comes his sexuality and 'contributed to his internal confusion'!!!. OMG!!! Can it not be anything better?
Any other thoughts? Conclusions? How many inventors in Tesla time would have liked to be him? It is still today. Why urge to bring Tesla down to the mare, average mind?

Is it possible that nobody, still, does not understand? Tesla was/has been YOGI in the Western world what YOGI has been in the Himalayan world. Tesla had his escapes in his laboratories to discover and make our lives better. And, he did! He scientifically/mathematically expressed Himalayan philosophy of existence desperately trying to make people understand; for the betterment of humans! But, someone did not like to give him credit much less financial satisfaction as normal ROI. It was/has been fine, however, for others to scoop all rewards on his discoveries. YOGI in Himalayas did not border to make people's life better! They already knew no hope for it! Himalayas are great shelter from pond-weed of ordinary mind. The true is still today.
12 people found this helpful
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Definitive Tesla Bio, Especially For Those Interested in NT

In Tesla, W. Bernard Carlson takes a historian's care to accurately portray Tesla's psychological profile and analyze the motives and illusions pertaining to his inventions. Carlson's portrayal casts doubt on the current near superhuman celebrity status of Tesla, presenting us with a critical analysis of both the great and the regrettable aspects of this inventor's life. He provides balanced insight into Tesla's genius to illuminate the factors behind Tesla's ascent to fame and tragic downward spiral. Some biographers awkwardly adhere to a rigid timeline, Carlson transitions unobtrusively from one event or time period to another. What we have here is the complicated truth behind Tesla's accomplishments, his contributions to the electrical revolution, and his failures.

Presenting us with balanced dose of both the man and his work and recognizing his complex contradictions, Carlson does an excellent job in this detailed exploration of the context, intentions, and motivations of Tesla. He only occasionally speculates about Tesla's motivations, such as the effect of his religious beliefs.

Black and white photos and diagrams of inventions also embellish this critical history. I haven't read other Tesla bios, but I'd be surprised if this isn't the definitive portrait of this fascinating inventor. One note for general readers, Carlson is a scholar and tends to ply his trade; that is, there may be more details than the average reader wants. For those very interested in Tesla, this is a plus for others, expect to do some skimming.
10 people found this helpful
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Tesla without the BS

Finally, here's a full-scale, believable biography of Tesla without the new-age and false-science crap encountered in so many other writings on this man. Most statements of fact are footnoted and plenty of Tesla's actual patent diagrams are presented. While some have criticized this book as overly technical, for me it wasn't nearly technical enough (I was an electronics professional in my working years). Instead, the author focuses on Tesla's mental processes as an inventor and how his quirky personality and showmanship influenced his work, successes and failures. Would Tesla's wireless electrical power scheme have worked? The author doesn't clearly answer this question. The list of references and sources would be valuable for anyone who seeks to further investigate Tesla's inventions and his long and still mysterious life.
7 people found this helpful
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Best biography by far

There are oodles of books on electrical innovator Nikola Tesla (1856-1943), too many of them filled with tall tales and wishful thinking. A few date back a century or more, but most have appeared since Tesla's death. Carlson, who teaches in the engineering school at the University of Virginia, has gotten behind the Tesla cultists to relate the fascinating story of the man's life, inventions, and eventual failure and sad end. Supported by clear diagrams and photos, 50 pages of notes, and a useful discussion of available sources, Carlson's biography is both readable and credible, which can't be said of most earlier Tesla books. One by one, Carlson takes on and debunks the wilder tales of what Tesla did or did not accomplish, those who conspired for or against him, and various might-have-beens. The truth is amazing enough, even or perhaps especially after all the years of silly whoopla is scraped away. This is a sensible, documented, and insightful telling of a fascinating life.
7 people found this helpful
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Wonderful true story very well told!

Tesla has been my hero for more than sixty years. His intellect and determination transformed the world. As a child, i began to read of his accomplishments and philosophy. By now, I believe that I have covered almost everything published in English about him as well as four bound volumes of his patents. I replicated a few of his devices and, by so doing, arrived at a fundamental appreciation of the concept of resonance. This book by W. Bernard Carlson is the clearest and most accessible writing I have found. It seems clear that, in course of researching this work, the author arrived at a genuine understanding of Tesla's physics, underlying spirit, personality and determination to offer his genius to the world at large. I can only offer my admiration and gratitude to Mr. Carlson and recommend this book to all who share the interest.

Incidentally, the transaction of buying this book brokered by Amazon.com was flawless.
6 people found this helpful
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On balance, a better bio than others

Carlson has fleshed out most of the key aspects of Tesla's contributions to invention and engineering in greater detail and with a more balanced approach than any of the previous biographers have achieved. In particular, he has painted a fuller, clearer picture of the early development of polyphase AC, crediting Tesla and highlighting the contributions made by others. He has steered away from unsubstantiated conjecture and his technical descriptions are more accurate and better conveyed (with a few minor caveats).

I suspect that Carlson was able to go into greater technical detail but probably chose not to, in case the book became too dry. There is ample information out there on AC and RF theory for those who want to dig deeper. His interpretation of Tesla's philosophical purpose that underpinned his inventing is refreshingly different to previous biographers and all the better for it.

Minor tech caveats: Carlson incorrectly states that a 2 phase motor has currents 90deg. out of phase, this should be 180deg. He also states (a commonly repeated misconception) that skin effect is the reason why large high frequency voltages from a Tesla coil oscillator didn't harm Tesla; the main reason is that in a resonant series LC, voltage and current peaks are out of phase (but I certainly don't advocate taking a shock from one - safety first).

With a greater focus on these key points, this has left less room for Tesla himself, which Seifer's biography covers in greater detail. If you only buy one biography about Tesla, buy this one, but be aware that others do have a contribution to make to understanding more about Tesla.
4 people found this helpful