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Paperback Edison's Concrete Piano: Flying Tanks, Six-Nippled Sheep, Walk-On-Water Shoes, and 12 Other Flops from Great Inventors Book

ISBN: 1550228633

ISBN13: 9781550228632

Edison's Concrete Piano: Flying Tanks, Six-Nippled Sheep, Walk-On-Water Shoes, and 12 Other Flops from Great Inventors

Edison's Concrete Piano highlights the careers of famous inventors -- revealing the lesser-known and most fascinating facts about their careers, their wackier hobbies, and especially their big flops and great successes. Take Thomas Edison for example, who revolutionized our world with the light bulb, the phonograph, and the forerunner to the movie camera. He also created a concrete piano, a non-operational helicopter made from box kites...

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Customer Reviews

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Concrete Pianos and Us

A fascinating book. Wearing has woven engaging stories about the genius and failings of a number of historic and modern science pioneers. Who knew that the Great Da Vinci considered himself a failure who wasted time despite creating enough ingenious devices to fill a museum (in France). Or that James Watt practically poisoned people in attempting to heal them. And Edison, someone we are all familiar with as a great inventor actually created a musical instrument that was solid as a rock but which ... well, I don't want to give away the story, let's just say there is a reason concrete pianos are rare. As an engineer, I was intrigued by all the inventors who attempted quite odd ways to create flying machines - odd to us, but understandable when the only examples to work with were birds. Which doesn't explain Cristie's flying tank idea. That one started odd and stayed odd. In a way, the failures of great people somehow make our foibles seem more acceptable. On the other hand, who among us has invented a light bulb recently. Wearing gives credit where credit is due while exposing the clay feet of great people. It's nice to know that we are all human and eccentric in so many different ways.

The Less Successful Inventions

It almost goes without saying that not all inventions by great inventors had, by definition, to be successful; there had to be at least some failures. However, it's easy to see that the general public may never have heard of them. In this book, the author has selected sixteen inventions, each one by a different inventor, that were unsuccessful. After the Introduction, the book is divided into sixteen chapters (one per invention) grouped into three main sections: The Historic Age (from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries), The Golden Age (from the nineteenth to the early twentieth centuries) and The Modern Era (from the early twentieth century onwards). The list of inventors includes da Vinci, Watt, Hooke, Edison, Tesla, Ford, Bell as well as others - even Albert Einstein and Leo Szilard are included. In each case, the author provides a brief outline (to varying degrees) of the inventor's life, other inventions, success (and failure) rate and what went wrong with the particular invention highlighted in the chapter. The writing style is clear, friendly, highly accessible and quite engaging. The only sketches/diagrams/photos of the inventions are found on the first page of each chapter; otherwise, no additional figures are included. This is a fun book that can be enjoyed by anyone - especially those fascinated by the history and evolution of technology.
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