I picked this book up hoping for information about the origin and development of the internal combustion (IC) engine as well as it's place against the competing technologies of the late 1800s. Well, the book did have some of that, but not quite how I imagined it. Perhaps it is a style of this author (I have not read any of his other works), or perhaps this topic is one that he feels exceptionally passionate about. But passionate he certainly is.
For some, this book is probably a high-water mark of literature on the topic of IC and how it has come to dominate the world of transportation. But I found it to be so heavy-handed, so strident, and so limited in its scope in places, that I might describe it as more of a "polemic" or "diatribe". Yes, it is a very clearly written work and obviously well-researched. But, just as obviously, the author has chosen to amplify and highlight (to extremes at times) those events or historic sequences that he feels illustrate the over-arching theme of the book: petroleum bad, electricity good.
Now, I don't disagree that the heavy use of fossil fuels has been and continues to be a negative for humanity and the Earth, but it has also been a positive. And this is largely acknowledged only as another accusation. The author also writes as if the energy monopolists and oligarchs have been the worst and most egregious for all of recorded history. I would dispute that viewpoint, as well.
But, on the plus side of the ledger, the book IS very well researched and it does give a wealth of information about past events that a more cursory reader may not have known of. The Edison Iron-Nickel storage battery (and the alliance with Ford) to create a low-cost, popular all-electric vehicle is something I nothing of. The varied development of the lead-acid storage battery (and the name Exide) being another example.
I knew of the plan and prosecution of GM to displace electrical trolley lines with gas/diesel buses, but the author gives quite a lot of excellent details on how GM entered the mass transportation business and how the displacements proceeded. Not surprisingly, other corporations in the petroleum, tire, etc. fields were co-conspirators, but this was a detail I was not familiar with either.
But even when he writes of these great incidents, he ignores or obscures facts that prove "inconvenient" to him. One case in point: The local/home generators that Edison was promoting. No where does the author mention, let alone detail, the fact that Edison was a proponent of Direct Current (DC) voltage systems (versus Alternating Current (AC) voltage).
Now, DC (at least without modern electronics) is difficult and inefficient to convert from one voltage to another, or to transfer for very large distances. And because of that (and because it was originally much simpler/easier to make a working DC motor) Edison HAD to put generating systems within a short distance to the consumer. In one account that I have read, the proposal was one every city block. But if one thinks about the implications of having a generator station every 1 or 2 blocks, then the case that it would be "cleaner" and less polluting seems rather far-fetched. As does the claim that "clean" energy sources of the early 1900s could have produced sufficient power.
Yes, these facts would have lengthened the book (the author had extra material on a website for other points he wished to make), but they would have diluted the impact the author was attempting to achieve, also. Yes, I am nitpicking, but I expected a more "balanced" work on the topic. (FYI - AC won out because, as Tesla argued, it could be sent more economically over long distances by converting it to a far higher voltage for transmission and then transforming it back to a lower one for actual use. Plus, a practical, efficient AC motor was developed - but originally only at 60 Hz, which is why AC power shifted from 135 Hz to 60 Hz before widespread adoption.)
Ultimately each reader needs to decide how much or how little they like a specific book. There are far worse and far less-well-informed books out there, so I do recommend this book. Just keep your mind open.