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| The Invention of Everything Else | 
| Author: Samantha Hunt Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Category: Book
List Price: $24.00 Buy New: $11.50 You Save: $12.50 (52%)
New (33) Collectible (3) from $11.50
Avg. Customer Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 80913
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 5.9 x 1.2
ISBN: 061880112X Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780618801121 ASIN: 061880112X
Publication Date: February 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description From the moment Louisa first catches sight of the strange man who occupies a forbidden room on the thirty-third floor, she is determined to befriend him.Unbeknownst to Louisa, he is Nikola Tesla?inventor of AC electricity and wireless communication?and he is living out his last days at the Hotel New Yorker.Winning his attention through a shared love of pigeons, she eventually uncovers the story of Tesla's life as a Serbian immigrant and a visionary genius: as a boy he built engines powered by June bugs, as a man he dreamed of pulling electricity from the sky.The mystery deepens when Louisa reunites with an enigmatic former classmate and faces the loss of her father as he attempts to travel to the past to meet up with his beloved late wife. Before the week is out, Louisa must come to terms with her own understanding of love, death, and the power of invention. The Invention of Everything Else immerses the reader in a magical mid-twentieth-century New York City thrumming with energy, wonder, and possibility.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
Dreamy historical fiction July 20, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a good read, but not as absorbing as I had hoped. I like the use of real historical figures like Mark Twain and John Muir. It's hard to believe Thomas Edison was quite as evil as depicted here. I love the ambience of old New York, and the dreamy quality of the writing.
I must say though, that time travel has become the genre "du jour." It's a good device and can resolve a myriad of situations, but I'm beginning to feel an over reliance on it.
I am also confused about a couple of things. Near the end of the book Tesla said he spoke to Louisa's "uncle Azor." Azor was not her uncle, but life-long friend of her father. Did I miss something? Her uncle was Dane. Also, Were Robert and Katherine people or robots? I think Hunt has been deliberately ambiguous about some parts of the plot.
fantastic!!!!!!!! May 21, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I do not have the words to say how much i love this book...Just buy it. Thank you Ms. hunt for the time travel back to old NY City
The fine line between fact and fiction April 15, 2008 Inventors have long had collective reputations of being brilliant and quirky and Nikola Tesla was no exception. Nicely captured in "The Invention of Everything Else", Samantha Hunt has created a story that might easily have passed as reality in Tesla's own life. That blurred line between fantasy and truth is Hunt's guiding light and she largely succeeds.
Tesla offers that inventors should not fall in love, yet his association with chambermaid Louisa, while proper, has a passionate proximity. It could be the one true love they both have found, but the author never lets the story get too close for comfort. The screwball friends and relatives they both have make Tesla and Louisa seem relatively normal by comparison.
Hunt's descriptiveness is better than her plot line. The whole idea about time travel gets confusing without a satisfactory conclusion, but her prose is colorful and never lacks definition. A tighter novel would have been better but Samantha Hunt is a promising writer and one from whom I hope we hear more.
absolutely wondrous! April 14, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
What a wise, marvelous book, passing easily between past, future, the possible and the not yet realized! The writing and science are often pure poetry. The novel tells the story of the eccentric and amazingly unrecognized inventor Tesla (now in his upper eighties and living with pigeons and a room full of scientific papers and detritus in the grand old New Yorker hotel in 1943), and a young chambermaid with a longing to understand him and a hope he can restore what she has lost. This is my first introduction to this author and I can't wait to read her first book.
Stephanie Cowell, author or MARRYING MOZART and NICHOLAS COOKE
"Quite honestly, radio is a nuisance. I know. I'm its father." April 10, 2008 18 out of 20 found this review helpful
This book is primarily about Nikola Tesla, the eccentric scientist and inventor from Smiljan, who invented AC electricity and wireless communication and belatedly received recognition as the inventor of radio. For the most part, it is a fictionalized account of the latter part of his life while living in New York, especially the time he spent at the New Yorker Hotel, and his interactions with his few friends and acquaintances.
It's also about a fictional chambermaid named Louisa, who is inclined towards being insatiably curious about the lives of the guests of the hotel. Louisa becomes obsessed with Tesla, his life and his inventions, and the two are drawn into a platonic friendship after discovering a mutual interest in homing pigeons. Louisa is also a part of another sub-story involving her widowed father, a family friend who claims to have invented a time machine, and a mysterious young man who may have come from the future.
Even though it's a relatively small book, it includes a detailed account of the life of Tesla, his triumphs, his failures, his phobias and inventions, and the many times he snatched defeat from the jaws of success. The writing style is largely conversational, and it doesn't get so bogged down in science that your eyes glaze over, but the overall structure of the story is sometimes hard to follow (and swallow).
The fact and the fiction don't quite fit together in this historical work, but the rich descriptions of the architecture, social structure and ambience of early twentieth century New York make for interesting reading.
Recommended for inventors, science buffs and historians
Amanda Richards, April 10, 2008
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