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Edison Kindle Edition
NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY Time • Publishers Weekly • Kirkus Reviews
Although Thomas Alva Edison was the most famous American of his time, and remains an international name today, he is mostly remembered only for the gift of universal electric light. His invention of the first practical incandescent lamp 140 years ago so dazzled the world—already reeling from his invention of the phonograph and dozens of other revolutionary devices—that it cast a shadow over his later achievements. In all, this near-deaf genius (“I haven’t heard a bird sing since I was twelve years old”) patented 1,093 inventions, not including others, such as the X-ray fluoroscope, that he left unlicensed for the benefit of medicine.
One of the achievements of this staggering new biography, the first major life of Edison in more than twenty years, is that it portrays the unknown Edison—the philosopher, the futurist, the chemist, the botanist, the wartime defense adviser, the founder of nearly 250 companies—as fully as it deconstructs the Edison of mythological memory. Edmund Morris, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, brings to the task all the interpretive acuity and literary elegance that distinguished his previous biographies of Theodore Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, and Ludwig van Beethoven. A trained musician, Morris is especially well equipped to recount Edison’s fifty-year obsession with recording technology and his pioneering advances in the synchronization of movies and sound. Morris sweeps aside conspiratorial theories positing an enmity between Edison and Nikola Tesla and presents proof of their mutually admiring, if wary, relationship.
Enlightened by seven years of research among the five million pages of original documents preserved in Edison’s huge laboratory at West Orange, New Jersey, and privileged access to family papers still held in trust, Morris is also able to bring his subject to life on the page—the adored yet autocratic and often neglectful husband of two wives and father of six children. If the great man who emerges from it is less a sentimental hero than an overwhelming force of nature, driven onward by compulsive creativity, then Edison is at last getting his biographical due.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateOctober 22, 2019
- File size70.3 MB

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From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
Review
The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize
“One of those rare works that is both definitive for the period it covers and fascinating to read for sheer entertainment.”—The New York Times Book Review
“A towering biography.”—Time
Theodore Rex
“A masterpiece . . . A great president has finally found a great biographer.”—The Washington Post
“As a literary work on Theodore Roosevelt, it is unlikely ever to be surpassed. It is one of the great histories of the American presidency, worthy of being on a shelf alongside Henry Adams’s volumes on Jefferson and Madison.”—The Times Literary Supplement
Colonel Roosevelt
“Monumental . . . Morris is a stylish storyteller with an irresistible subject.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Hair-raising . . . awe-inspiring . . . a worthy close to a trilogy sure to be regarded as one of the best studies not just of any president, but of any American.”—San Francisco Chronicle
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
At seventy-three, with his wartime career as president of the Naval Consulting Board behind him, Edison tried to make sense of a new intellectual order that challenged everything he had learned of Newtonian theory. Abstract thought did not come easily to him. “My line of sorrow,” he wrote, “lies in the realm of technical science.” He needed to feel things come together under his hands, see the filament glow, smell the carbolic acid, and—as far as possible for a near-deaf man—hear the “molecular concussions” of music.1
Laws such as those of Faraday’s electromagnetic induction and Ohm’s relation of current, voltage, and resistance he understood, having applied them himself in the laboratory. But now, if only to slow as much as possible the entropy of his own particles (the fate of all systems, according to Lord Kelvin), Edison studied Einstein’s general theory of relativity.2 The recent solar eclipse had persuaded him, along with the academic scientists he mocked as “the bulge-headed fraternity,” that the theory was valid—even if it failed to suggest any correlation between his attempt to measure the total eclipse of 1878 and his subsequent perfection of incandescent electric light.3
The urtext of the theory, as translated by Robert Lawson, defeated him after only eleven pages. “Einstein like every other mathematical mind,” he scrawled in the margin of his copy, “has not the slightest capacity to impart to the lay mind even an inkling of the subject he tries to explain.” He turned for help to an interpretive essay—Georges de Bothezat’s “The Einstein Theory of Relativity: A Glance into the Nature of the Question”—and filled thirty-one notebook pages with scrawled paraphrases of its main points.4
Gravitation is due to the retardation in velocity of the ultimate particle in passing through the fixed aggregates of matter. Ultimate particles fill the whole of space and proceed in every direction. . . .
He could imagine that at least in terms of his own observation, forty years before, of the thermionic emission of carbon electrons in a lightbulb after evacuation—a mysterious darkening since known as the “Edison Effect.” It was about as far as he ever got in his search for a “new force” in electrochemistry. Disparaged at the time by his peers, he now knew that he had discovered, if not recognized, the phenomenon of radio waves eight years before Heinrich Hertz.
Wireless waves cannot proceed thru space but thru Matter in combination with the ultimate particle. . . . From this, if true, all matter is formed of the same material.
Edison had once teased a science fiction writer with the notion of interchanging atoms of himself with those of a rose. He noted that Einstein envisaged particles in space with common axes converging into solidly constituted “rings,” while others remained ethereal. Hence the “primal ring” of the solar system, with its interplanetary nothingness.
We now have matter in a form which is polar & capable of producing what we call Magnetism & Electricity.
The religion boys, of course, would protest that what drew particles together was the will of God. Edison was as ready as Einstein to believe in a “Supreme Intelligence” made manifest by the order and beauty of the stars, and equally reluctant to personalize it: “I cannot conceive such a thing as a spirit.” The furthest he would go in the direction of metaphysics was to imagine the subcellular particles of a human being as “infinitesimally small individuals, each itself a unit of life.”5
These units work in squads—or swarms, as I prefer to call them—and . . . live for ever. When we “die” these swarms of units, like a swarm of bees, so to speak, betake themselves elsewhere and go on functioning in some other form or environment. If the units of life which compose an individual’s memory hold together after that individual’s death, is it not within the range of possibility . . . that these memory swarms could retain what we call the individual’s personality after the dissolution of the body?
Having thus anticipated by more than a century both swarm intelligence and DNA inheritance theory, Edison gave up trying to understand relativity and returned to the more tangible universe he preferred.
A Big Bump for Cookies
As he saw it, his first order of business in the new decade was to reimpose his own—highly individual—personality upon Thomas A. Edison, Inc., the sprawling industrial conglomerate that he had been forced to neglect during the war. He chose not to notice that it had thereby done much better than it had in earlier years, when he had run its manifold activities—phonograph and record production, movie making, cement milling, storage battery development, and laboratory research—with such autocratic willfulness as to make his executives despair of ever influencing him.
Edison was not an easy man to advise, being a combination of twinkling charm and bruising imperiousness. In his youth the charm had prevailed, but now that he was a septuagenarian and almost unreachably deaf, the urge to overbear had become a compulsion, and he had lost much of the bonhomie that had kept thousands of men working for him, and worshiping him, over the past half-century. Long gone was the perpetual hint of a smile flickering around the corners of his mouth, as if he were about to break into thigh-slapping laughter. The artist Richard Outcault remembered its radiance back in ’89, when “the boys” presented “the Old Man” with a gold and silver phonograph for his birthday. “Edison’s smile! [It] sweetened up the atmosphere of the whole building. . . . As long as I live the sweet spirit that pervaded the atmosphere of the laboratory will always remain with me.”6
Edison still moved with the jerky energy that kept him awake, and acting more decisively, than young men unable to match his eighteen-hour-a-day schedule. He regarded exercise as a waste of time, and sleep even more so. Since he was twenty, he had maintained his 175-pound, five-foot-nine-and-a-half-inch frame with only a few lapses, quickly corrected. (“I do believe I have a big bump for cookies.”) The most remarkable thing about his appearance, apart from the brilliance of the blue-gray eyes, was the largeness of his head, amplified by its thick mop of snowy hair. He wore custom-made size eight-and-a-half straw hats, and slashed the bands of his caps for comfort. His handshake was perfunctory and surprisingly cold. Monomaniacally focused on whatever current project interested him, he strode at a forward angle, hands in vest pockets, aware only of his destination and completely unconscious of time. He never wore a watch, and made no distinction between day and night, nodding off when he felt like it and expecting his assistants to follow suit. The same went for waking up. If two hours of rest was enough for him, he did not see why anyone else should want more.7
Lovable as he was—or had been in the past—Edison did not return affection, beyond the occasional beaming familiarity, in which there was often a note of tease. He thought hurtful practical jokes—electrified washbasins, a wad of chewing tobacco spat onto a white summer suit, firecrackers tossed at the bare feet of children—were funny. Having made money easily all his life, thanks to phenomenal energy and the mysterious gift of imagination (his personal wealth, at latest calculation, was almost $10 million), he was unmoved by the lesser luck or ill fortune of others, and casual about the loneliness of his wives. Now, returning to his laboratory desk in 1920, he was determined to teach Charles Edison a thing or two about running a large corporation.
Product details
- ASIN : B07NCMDWZD
- Publisher : Random House
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : October 22, 2019
- Language : English
- File size : 70.3 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 737 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0679644651
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #251,478 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Edmund Morris is one of America's best political biographers and journalists. He is the Pulitzer Prize winning author of biographies of Theodore Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. He lives in New York and Washington, DC.
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Customers find the biography well-researched and full of wonderful details about Thomas Edison's life. The writing style receives mixed reactions, with some finding it well-written while others say it's confusing. Moreover, the book is written in reverse chronological order, making it difficult to follow. Additionally, customers appreciate the extensive footnotes, with one review noting over three hundred footnotes. However, the biography quality and pacing receive mixed reactions.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers praise the book's information quality, noting it is full of wonderful details and provides extensive coverage of Thomas Edison's life.
"Edmund Morris' biography of Thomas Edison is outstanding and comprehensive. It covers Edison's entire life (warts and all!) in glorious detail...." Read more
"...Large sections of it that are so technical and detailed that my eyes glazed over and I skimmed over the material...." Read more
"...It sheds new light on his scientific knowledge and practical genius. I have read other books about Edison, and I would rate this as one of the best...." Read more
"...Morris's book 5 stars because he not only provides voluminous original source material references, but because he writes as a mature author who..." Read more
Customers appreciate Edison's genius and tireless work ethic, with one customer noting his massive number of inventions and another describing him as a fascinating American icon.
"...You will get a deep dive into electricity and various engineering minutiae of Edison's prolific inventive mind...." Read more
"...It sheds new light on his scientific knowledge and practical genius. I have read other books about Edison, and I would rate this as one of the best...." Read more
"...Certainly, Thomas Edison, one of the most prolific inventors in history, is deserving of study as relates to the technological advancements that..." Read more
"A great treatment of Edison and his amazing life of invention...." Read more
Customers appreciate the extensive notes in the book, with one mentioning it includes over three hundred footnotes.
"...The book has extensive notes, and they contain a considerable amount of additional information. There's also a bibliography." Read more
"...The work includes over three hundred footnotes and many black and white photos of Edison, his family, friends, homes and lab facilities...." Read more
"...Lots of great facts and footnotes, but reading someone's life in this non contiguous fashion is disconcerting at best and nonsensical on balance...." Read more
"Benjamin Button-esque, Unorthodox Biography, Exhaustive and Exhausting..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book, with some finding it well written and interesting as a biography, while others describe it as tedious and confusing.
"...in glorious detail. The book is very well written and very readable...." Read more
"...It is a Benjamin Button-esque approach to biography. It is not reader-friendly and evokes some head-scratching...." Read more
"This is an excellent biography of Thomas Edison. It is well written, and wonderfully well researched...." Read more
"...It is a voluminous tome to say the least, but worth every page turn." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the biography, with some appreciating its historical content, while others find it too technical.
"...This is not a hagiography, however, that lionizes Edison. Feet of clay show through. The book shows him, warts and all...." Read more
"...work that has done a fine job of maintaining professional and historical integrity, has nonetheless been of a scholarly bent and might not appeal to..." Read more
"...You know the future but not the past. A biography is not the place to get artsy. For example, you start off with his wife being Mina...." Read more
"...author is known for his well-written text, which creates an exciting historical review because of the details that are included, which relate some..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it interesting starting with Edison's death, while others find it contrived and too focused on minutiae.
"...It is pointless. It is contrived. Perhaps it is a literary conceit...." Read more
"...It covers Edison's entire life (warts and all!) in glorious detail. The book is very well written and very readable...." Read more
"...give this book an even higher rating but I felt it went into far too much minutiae for the average reader...." Read more
"Very detailed, but quirky, because the chapters were for 10-15 year sections of his life, but they were in reverse chronological order." Read more
Customers find the book's narrative structure problematic, as it is written in reverse chronological order, making it difficult to follow.
"...would have provided context for the unorthodox, counterintuitive anti-chronological approach used here...." Read more
"...Yet I give it only 3 stars BECAUSE . . . the whole darn book is written backwards...." Read more
"...This does take some getting used to and can be momentarily disorienting, but I think I understand the author's intent...." Read more
"...It makes no sense whatsoever and creates difficulty as the author frequently has to refer to past events by directing the reader forward within the..." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2025Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseEdmund Morris' biography of Thomas Edison is outstanding and comprehensive. It covers Edison's entire life (warts and all!) in glorious detail. The book is very well written and very readable.
The bottom line is that Edison is a worthwhile read for anyone interested in a good biography.
The book has extensive notes, and they contain a considerable amount of additional information. There's also a bibliography.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2021Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe book is an exhaustive -- and at times exhausting -- treatment in detail of Edison's life. Large sections of it that are so technical and detailed that my eyes glazed over and I skimmed over the material. You will get a deep dive into electricity and various engineering minutiae of Edison's prolific inventive mind.
What comes through was Edison's almost superhuman, inexhaustible, indefatigable energy and intellectual wattage. He would work for long stretches of time without sleeping or eating, so focused on his experiments, inventions and projects. His mind was constantly churning with ideas as he filled notebooks with future visions and projects. He would try hundreds, thousands of methods and experiments until he found a solution to the problem that he was tackling. His intellectual persistence seems superhuman. It is hard to think of another individual who was his prolific and productive through sheer output of ideas and ingenious inventions.
This is not a hagiography, however, that lionizes Edison. Feet of clay show through. The book shows him, warts and all. He seemed to lack business savvy and flirted with financial problems despite the massive financial windfalls available from his various inventions, patents and products. He wed twice, but one gets the impression that he essentially lived a life separate from his wives, so absorbed was he with his work. His children became afterthoughts as well; it is hard to say that he had any relationship with them other than monetarily. He fathered children, but did not seem to be much of a Dad to his children, many of whom suffered from lacking much other than a genetic/biological relationship with him.
The curious feature of this book is its unorthodox structure and organization. I am a huge fan of Edmund Morris and -- in particular -- his three-volume opus on the life of Theodore Roosevelt. Unlike those books, however, Morris opts for a weird organizational structure to this biography. Essentially, he begins the book at the end of Edison's life and then works backwards in roughly ten-year chunks from the end-of-life, ending with Edison's boyhood in Ohio. It is a Benjamin Button-esque approach to biography. It is not reader-friendly and evokes some head-scratching.
One might expect that, in a Preface/Foreword, either Morris or his Editor posthumously would have provided context for the unorthodox, counterintuitive anti-chronological approach used here. It's almost as though Morris was saying, "I did it because . . . well, I can!"
As other reviewers have correctly noted, one workaround is to simply read the chapters in reverse order. I chose not to do that, but why not make the manuscript as reader-friendly as possible or provide context for the unorthodox biographical approach? A rhetorical question but a legitimate one nonetheless.
Ultimately, this was a detailed biography of perhaps America's most prolific inventor. The technical details and approach to the narrative however at times tested my willpower to grind on through to the very end. Your mileage may vary.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2025Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseDont let the nay sayers fool you. I have read others bios about the great man….this is a keeper. Plus other interesting tidbits i didnt know.
I find this book especially helpful if you need immediate inspiration or I’ve lost energy for new ideas the man was a great.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2019Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is an excellent biography of Thomas Edison. It is well written, and wonderfully well researched. It has many vivid descriptions of the man and his time. It sheds new light on his scientific knowledge and practical genius. I have read other books about Edison, and I would rate this as one of the best. Yet I give it only 3 stars BECAUSE . . . the whole darn book is written backwards.
It begins with Edison as a dying old man in 1931, and you think: “ah, this is like Citizen Kane. A flashback.” Then you come to find the next section goes from 1920 to 1929, and the next from 1910 to 1919, and so on, jumping back a decade in each section. This is indescribably confusing. If I had not read other books about Edison, and if I did not leave Google open and ready to look up people’s names and potted biographies, I would not be able to keep track of who is who or when Edison did what. His life was crammed with events and people, and one thing led to another. Yet instead of following the threads of these events, they keep breaking off. The only way to read it is go back and re-read the beginning and the end of each section before you start on the next. For 1910 to 1919, you have to start with the end of 1900 – 1909, or you lose track of the story. I would suggest you read the whole book backwards, but that doesn’t work either, because there is so much foreshadowing. Or after-shadowing, meaning that as the book draws to a close, it suddenly begins to explain things that happened at the beginning. That is to say, the beginning of the book; the end of his life.
His wife grows younger in each section, and his first wife . . . wait, what? His first wife? What happened to her? She died. When did she die? When did they marry? You don’t find out until the book is mostly over. Both wives had three children, but I cannot to keep track of which wife had which, because the children grow younger in each section, going from adulthood, to college, grade school, to babyhood.
I cannot imagine what motivated the author and editors to structure the book this way. It is pointless. It is contrived. Perhaps it is a literary conceit. In any case, I suggest you print out a brief biography of Edison and refer to it to keep track.
Perhaps you should start with another fine book, Robert Conot’s book, “Thomas A. Edison, A Streak of Luck.” It describes some of Edison’s foibles, orneriness and double dealing perhaps more honestly. It presents the story chronologically.
Top reviews from other countries
- Abraham MathewsReviewed in India on December 11, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Edison Biography ❤️
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase- Good print quality
- I have started to read: enjoyable
Abraham MathewsEdison Biography ❤️
Reviewed in India on December 11, 2024
- I have started to read: enjoyable
Images in this review
- Arend SmidReviewed in Canada on December 18, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars It's a book.
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseEducational..?
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Australia on November 3, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read, well structured
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseLoved the book
- Cliente KindleReviewed in Brazil on June 12, 2025
1.0 out of 5 stars Tried to be original, screwed up big time.
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis book was written in a very weird chronological order, in which it starts recounting the last decade of Edison's life in chronological order, than goes back to the prior, and so on. It is a complete mess of back-and-forth history with characters going and coming in a very mangled and confusing way. There is a linearity on how Edison went from one topic to another, but this book obliterated it. Also, too much emphasis was given to business intrigues and too little on the very interesting personality and thinking of Edison. I think the author tried to be original with this convoluted timeline, but ended screwing up big time.
- DonReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 20, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars The best biography of Thomas Edison, detailed and documented.
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseAs much about business as invention. An implicit guide to life: Half what to do and half what not to do. Edited, you might say, by Sigmund Freud.