Just like the fascination of the local people of Colorado Springs during his exciting, for-frontal, and top-secret experiments in the late 1890s, I simply couldn't put down this book, nor could I skim through as much as I tried. Each page strengthened my deep interest in this man.
It gave me insight into the story behind the infamous events in his life; his presentations at Columbia College, the AC-DC war with Thomas Edison, The 1983 World's Fair at Chicago, the pioneering development to use Niagara Falls as a hydroelectric power plant to provide energy to a whole city, and much more. Margaret Cheney provides a detailed, empathetic, and transparent view over Tesla's life covering his personal life, his inventions, his financial feuds and dealings, his aspirations, as well as his personality itself.
As you read the book you very quickly understand why Cheney titled the book 'Man out of time'. It's incredible to think the impact Tesla would have made to the world if he was given more time on this planet, let alone the impact he had already made in his short life.
What a character he was - a germaphobe, isolated, single, constantly had nightmares and vivid dreams, had photographic memory (supposedly a gift and curse), very direct to the point and yet, a gentleman, a grand entertainer and lecturer, known as a "wizard". He would explain his inventions and their abilities with such magnificence in a dream-like and ethereal way that makes you wonder with fascination the infinite potential of science. His explanations would supposedly not only be easy to understand, but would also be enjoyable for the audience.
I myself very much enjoyed reading through the chapters that covered aspects like this, an almost 'behind the scene' look at how he was different to other inventors at the time and how he personally prepared himself for the daily, in many cases, deadly, challenge.
Aside from the man himself, how great it is the read and imagine a time of such creation and change. The late 19th century was a period to truly marvel at. Tesla, on multiple occasions had interactions with the likes of J.P Morgan, George Westinghouse, Lord Rayleigh, Lord Kelvin, Marconi, Mary Curie, Sir Ian Bell, John Bardeen, Micheal Pupin, Andrew Carnegie, and of course, Thomas Edison. What a time. The modern age of the technological world was literally being created by these people, and Nikola Tesla was most definitely among them.
Everyone should be more well-read about Nikola Tesla - he, in contrast to other scientists who laid the foundations of their fields through their inventions and experiments, I believe, isn't as appreciated, respected, or learned about today. The full scope of what he provided to the world and the sacrifices he made to achieve them needs to be better understood in our current education system, in my opinion.