| Kindle Price: | $12.99 |
| Sold by: | Random House LLC Price set by seller. |
Your Memberships & Subscriptions
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Empires of Light: Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse, and the Race to Electrify the World Kindle Edition
In the final decades of the nineteenth century, three brilliant and visionary titans of America’s Gilded Age—Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, and George Westinghouse—battled bitterly as each vied to create a vast and powerful electrical empire. In Empires of Light, historian Jill Jonnes portrays this extraordinary trio and their riveting and ruthless world of cutting-edge science, invention, intrigue, money, death, and hard-eyed Wall Street millionaires. At the heart of the story are Thomas Alva Edison, the nation’s most famous and folksy inventor, creator of the incandescent light bulb and mastermind of the world’s first direct current electrical light networks; the Serbian wizard of invention Nikola Tesla, elegant, highly eccentric, a dreamer who revolutionized the generation and delivery of electricity; and the charismatic George Westinghouse, Pittsburgh inventor and tough corporate entrepreneur, an industrial idealist who in the era of gaslight imagined a world powered by cheap and plentiful electricity and worked heart and soul to create it.
Edison struggled to introduce his radical new direct current (DC) technology into the hurly-burly of New York City as Tesla and Westinghouse challenged his dominance with their alternating current (AC), thus setting the stage for one of the eeriest feuds in American corporate history, the War of the Electric Currents. The battlegrounds: Wall Street, the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, Niagara Falls, and, finally, the death chamber—Jonnes takes us on the tense walk down a prison hallway and into the sunlit room where William Kemmler, convicted ax murderer, became the first man to die in the electric chair.
- ISBN-109781588360007
- ISBN-13978-0375507397
- PublisherRandom House
- Publication dateAugust 19, 2003
- LanguageEnglish
- File size5005 KB
Kindle E-Readers
- Kindle Paperwhite
- Kindle Paperwhite (5th Generation)
- Kindle Touch
- Kindle Voyage
- Kindle
- Kindle Oasis
- All new Kindle paperwhite
- All New Kindle E-reader
- Kindle Oasis (9th Generation)
- Kindle Paperwhite (10th Generation)
- Kindle Paperwhite (11th Generation)
- All New Kindle E-reader (11th Generation)
- Kindle Scribe (1st Generation)
- Kindle (10th Generation)
- Kindle Oasis (10th Generation)
Fire Tablets
Free Kindle Reading Apps
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
—The Washington Post Book World
“A rollicking story of competitive zeal . . . [the book] delivers richly on its promise: chronicling a vital stage of American progress as seen through the lives of three mavericks.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Entertaining and informative . . . a lively account of how personal ambitions and hostilities fueled the interaction between science and business during the long War of the Electric Currents.”
—The Los Angeles Times Book Review
“Jonnes does a fine job portraying these men against the historical background of the Gilded Age in this engaging, well-documented volume.”
—Chicago Tribune
“[Jill Jonnes] brings [Edison, Tesla, and Westinghouse] to life through cumulative biographical detail.”
—Boston Sunday Globe
“A crackerjack account of the race for electrification . . . [Empires of Light] is a story of the collision of business and technology, and Jonnes tells it well.”
—San Francisco Chronicle (Best Books of 2003)
“The electrons fairly leap as Jonnes personifies that high-voltage history with a three-wired account.”
—Johns Hopkins Magazine
“Jonnes re-creates this venomous rivalry in a delightful book that may remind readers of E.L. Doctorow’s novel Ragtime. . . . but Empires of Light is no fiction; it’s a meticulously researched narrative in which famous people go baying after an elusive goal: to power cities by harnessing a hidden force wrested from the atmosphere.”
—Discover
“With Empires of Light, Jill Jonnes joins the genre of academicians who truly document for the nation’s collective memory the significant struggles that led to commonplace conveniences of today.”
—The Baltimore Sun
“[Empires of Light] moves seamlessly back and forth in time. . . . Jonnes is a fine biographer and an excellent scientific and industrial historian. She’s done a superb job of telling an important story.”
—Rocky Mountain News
“Fascinating.”
—The Buffalo News
“Jonnes’s book makes us think about the dramatic changes electricity brought.”
—Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
“Compelling . . .Jill Jonnes has delivered an absorbing tale about the advent of the power grid.”
—The San Diego Union-Tribune
“Jonnes lucidly lays out the technical issues, playing plenty of attention to the personalities involved to liven things up for the general reader.”
—Newsday.com
“Jill Jonnes’s Empires of Light is the most exciting science/business adventure to come out in the past decade. Once she gets past the initial discoveries of the properties of electricity, her brilliant storytelling pulls the reader into a gripping, real-life turn-of-the-century tale full of twists, turns, ironies, dirty tricks, breakthrough challenges, accomplishments, tragedies and triumphs.”
—Houston Chronicle
“An amazing book, one so entertaining that i treads almost like a novel . . . a powerful narrative that captures the tension of a time long gone.”
—San Jose Mercury News
“Thoughtful and well paced.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Jonnes serves up plenty of color in an engaging and relaxed style.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A very accessible and informative historical account that will be fascinating reading for a general audience as well as those with a more specialized interest.”
—Booklist
“Compelling . . . Like the late Stephen Ambrose, historian Jill Jonnes paints her story with a broad canvas and populates it with titans.”
—BookPage
“A thoroughly engaging and highly informative account of three inventors who pioneered the production and distribution of electricity. Without these three engineers the world would simply not be what we know today.”
—Henry Petroski, author of The Evolution of Useful Things
“Jill Jonnes’ Empires of Light is the captivating—no, let’s say electrifying—saga of the War of the Electric Currents fought at the close of the nineteenth century with typical Gilded Age excess by Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla, and George Westinghouse. From the electrification of J. P. Morgan’s New York mansion to Westinghouse’s subjugation of Niagara Falls, Jonnes explains in human terms how alternating current achieved dominance over direct current, a victory of incalculable importance in the history of the world—and she tells the story with great, at times even macabre, verve, as in her account of the invention of the electric chair and its horrifying first use. Along the way she solves numerous little mysteries of electric power, among them why Broadway became nicknamed ‘The Great White Way.’ ”
—Erik Larson, author of In the Garden of Beasts and The Devil in the White City
“Empires of Light is a fascinating and vivid portrait of a tumultuous era. In a fast-paced narrative, Jill Jonnes recreates the personalities, technologies, and corporate intrigues that changed America by—literally—electrifying the nation.”
—Lauren Belfer, author of City of Light
From the Inside Flap
Edison struggled to introduce his radical new direct current (DC) technology into the hurly-burly of New York City as Tesla and Westinghouse challenged his dominance with their alternating current (AC), thus setting the stage for one of the eeriest feuds in American corporate history, the War of the Electric Currents. The battlegrounds: Wall Street, the 1893 Chicago World?s Fair, Niagara Falls, and, finally, the death chamber?Jonnes takes us on the tense walk down a prison hallway and into the sunlit room where William Kemmler, convicted ax murderer, became the first man to die in the electric chair.
Empires of Light is the gripping history of electricity, the ?mysterious fluid,? and how the fateful collision of Edison, Tesla, and Westinghouse left the world utterly transformed.
From the Back Cover
"Empires of Lightis a thoroughly engaging and highly informative account of three inventors who pioneered the production and distribution of electricity. Without these three engineers the world would simply not be what we know today." –Henry Petroski, author of The Evolution of Useful Things
"[Empires of Light is] thoughtful and well paced." -Kirkus Reviews
"[Empires of Light is] a crackerjack account of the race for electrification." -San Francisco Chronicle
"Jill Jonnes' Empires of Light is the captivating–no, let's say electrifying–saga of the "War of the Electric Currents" fought at the close of the 19th century with typical Gilded-Age excesss by Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla and George Westinghouse. From the electrification of J. P. Morgan's New York mansion to Westinghouse's subjugation of Niagara Falls, Jonnes explains in human terms how alternating current achieved dominance over direct current, a victory of incalculable importance in the history of the world–and she tells the story with great, at times even macabre, verve, as in her account of the invention of the electric chair and its horrifying first use. Along the way she solves numerous little mysteries of electric power, among them why Broadway became nicknamed "The Great White Way." -Erik Larson, author of Isaac's Storm: A Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History
“Empires of Light is a fascinating and vivid portrait of a tumultuous era. In a fast-paced narrative, Jill Jonnes recreates the personalities, technologies, and corporate intrigues that changed America by–literally–electrifying the nation.” -Lauren Belfer, author of City of Light
About the Author
Jill Jonnes is a historian and the author of Empires of Light: Edison, Tesla, Westinghouse, and the Race to Electrify the World and South Bronx Rising: The Rise, Fall & Resurrection of an American City. She has also been an NEH scholar and has received several grants from the Ford Foundation.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
"Morgan's House Was Lighted Up Last Night"
In the late spring of 1882, Thomas Alva Edison, world famous as the folksy genius who had invented the improved telegraph and telephone, the amazing talking phonograph, and the incandescent light bulb, would shamble in occasionally to the hushed, formal suites of Drexel, Morgan & Company at 23 Wall Street, an imposing white marble Renaissance palace of mammon. There in a glass-walled back office, J. Pierpont Morgan presided at an oversize rolltop desk. The autocratic senior partner wore a banker's black suit, starched snowy shirt, wing collar, and fine gray silk ascot. His expensive, ever-present Havana cigar made the air smoky, redolent of privilege and power. Morgan's investment firm was partially bankrolling Edison's fevered building of America's first incandescent electric lighting system in the crowded commercial blocks of lower Manhattan. When Edison visited Drexel, Morgan, the clean-shaven, still boyish inventor loved to disparage the office's gaslight globes as burning a "vile poison." But soon the gaslight would be gone, preempted by Edison's beloved clean electric light.
Edison, thirty-five, was already a celebrated figure in the downtown streets, recognizable in his signature slouch-brim hat or battered stovepipe, shabby shirt, bright neckerchief, and frayed black Prince Albert coat. He and his crews were logging dusty eighteen-hour shifts as they pushed to finish the far-behind-schedule Pearl Street Station generating plant and install (only at night) fourteen miles of just-below-the-street electrical conduits. All morning and afternoon pedestrians ebbed and flowed through the financial neighborhood, dark-suited men sporting shiny top hats or black bowlers, clutching their canes. "Bank messengers, with bags filled with coin, greenbacks, bills of exchange, bonds and stocks, hurry along," wrote one contemporary of hustling-bustling Wall Street, "keeping a firm grip upon their bags and eying each person they pass warily, office boys, telegraph boys with yellow envelopes containing messages from all quarters of the globe, dart here and there through the throng." These acolytes of the high-toned, handsome financial district shared the jammed nearby streets with horse-drawn trolleys, heavy delivery wagons, dog-drawn rag carts, noisy oyster sellers, and small boys hawking any one of the city's dozens of newspapers. Everywhere, with the weather warming up, the city's streets reeked of horse piss and dung left daily by the 150,000 horses pulling the city's trams, trucks, Broadway stages, and fancy rigs. At night, when Edison most liked to work, he could be found with his Irish crews laying trenches somewhere near Pearl Street, already dirty with grease and tar, or tinkering with the six jumbo dynamos installed up on the reinforced second floor.
That late spring and summer, Edison had occasion to confer with J. Pierpont on another small but important job. In his office, Morgan cultivated a renowned ferocity: the gruff, impatient bark, the famed glare that challenged visitors of any rank to intrude. Other wealthy men in this most hirsute of eras flaunted complex and flamboyant beards and mustachios, but the forty-five-year-old Morgan sported only a plain, trimmed mustache. J. Pierpont Morgan had been raised an old money gentleman, conservative and stern in manner and habits. But the America of the 1880s was changing rapidly, daring men and women to dream bold dreams, to grasp for great ventures and great wealth. Just a few blocks south, the Roeblings' magnificent East River Bridge was nearing completion after thirteen arduous years, a soaring engineering marvel of suspension, floating across the shimmering New York waters. Nearby, the elevated railroads with their small belching steam engines chugged stolidly along, high above the chaos and stench of Manhattan's tangled traffic, astounding visitors with their efficient moving of tens of thousands of workers as they snaked north between tenements and offices and then out to the far bucolic reaches of the city. The miracle of the great Atlantic cable flashed telegrams across the coldest depths of the ocean. Where once letters from Pierpont's father in the London office took weeks to arrive, now telegrams pulsed through in mere minutes. The railroads had become mighty, creating new cities where there had been only marshland or prairie. In just the past year, they had laid an astounding ten thousand miles of track. The 1880 census showed fifty million Americans. Morgan, unlike many of his old money peers, relished this new temper of the times, admired men like Edison who were bold, ambitious, hardworking, confident.
Late that spring, Morgan, who had just returned from a long European tour, had briefly put aside his considerable business concerns and announced to Edison an audacious decision. He was going to personally showcase the advantages of Edison's pioneering incandescent light in his elegant Madison Avenue brownstone, just then in the throes of top-to-bottom renovation. Morgan's Italianate mansion would become, thereby, the first private residence in New York to be illuminated solely by electricity. This was, of course, no simple matter. Nonetheless, the imperious Morgan wanted the electricity installed and working by the time he, his wife, Fanny, and their three teenage children moved in that fall from their country estate, Cragston, up the Hudson River. Edison was delighted to oblige, for it would be a great coup to have Morgan's personal imprimatur on what many dismissed as a dangerous and exotic novelty. Whatever people thought of J. P. Morgan, no one thought him a fool. Money men had learned that he was decisive, intelligent, and swift of action, and above all, he kept his word, no small matter when spectral figures liked Jay Gould preyed upon the stock market.
And so, as the shad were about to make their annual run up the Hudson River, a crew of Edison workers clopped up in a horse-drawn wagon to Morgan's nearly renovated mansion at 219 Madison on the northeast corner of 36th Street. They laboriously excavated a large earthen cellar beneath the wooden stable, their shovels rhythmically slinging dirt and rocks into a growing pile. Within the musty space of the dirt cellar, they installed a squat steam engine and boiler to power two electric generators, all of which displaced Morgan's carriage horses to a nearby stable. The men also dug a ditch connecting the new cellar to the house, lined it with bricks, laid in the electrical wires, and bricked it over. Inside the mansion, decorator Christian Herter supervised the snaking of insulated electrical wires up through the elaborately wood-paneled and plastered walls where ordinarily the gas lines would have gone. These wires were then threaded through to every space in the mansion, and new electrical fixtures were installed. In some rooms electrical wires hung straight down every few feet from small holes in the tall ceilings, sprouting at their tips several small light bulbs.
On Thursday, June 8, 1882, Edison Electric Company president Major Sherbourne Eaton wrote Edison, "Morgan's house was lighted up last night. I was not there but I am told that the light was satisfactory and that Morgan was delighted. The armature of the 250 light [bulb] machine sparked badly. It will have to be changed at once. Vail took charge of that. Herter was present and declared himself entirely satisfied. Morgan is pleased with everything but Herter's fixtures." By fall, as the New York social season opened, the Wall Street financier and his family were installed in their new home with its 385 electric lights, casting a soft, even, incandescent glow everywhere, from the servants' halls and butler's pantry to the bedrooms and the "Japanese manner" reception room and sitting room. The Romanesque dining room with its high oak paneling was particularly striking, for there electric lights cast a lovely jeweled radiance through the twelve-foot-square stained-glass skylight.
The deluxe Artistic Houses rhapsodized about every rich and costly detail of Morgan's newly renovated brownstone residence, gushing especially about the vast and splendiferous terra-cotta drawing room, where "a breath from the Graeco-Roman epoch of Italia seems to have left its faint impress on the walls, or rather its faint fragrance in the atmosphere . . . amid the aroma of perfect taste." This must have pleased Morgan, who disdained the obvious vulgarity of many of the new Gilded Age millionaires. His house was meant to convey an aura of money and power, subtly burnished by his European education, culture, and worldly intelligence. What was genuinely new and unique was Edison's electric light. "Each room is supplied with it, and, in order to illuminate a room, you have simply to turn a knob as you enter. By turning a knob near the head of his bed, Mr. Morgan is able to light instantaneously the hall and every room on the first floor, basement, and cellar-a valuable precaution in case of the arrival of burglars." This assumed burglars did not prowl and enter in the middle of the night. Because, as Morgan's son-in-law Herbert Satterlee explained in a memoir of Morgan, "The generator had to be run by an expert engineer who came on duty at three p.m. and got up steam, so that at any time after four o'clock on a winter's afternoon the lights could be turned on. This man went off duty at 11 p.m. It was natural that the family should often forget to watch the clock, and while visitors were still in the house, or possibly a game of cards was going on, the lights would die down and go out." Then there was a careful groping about in the sudden murk to light beeswax candles and kerosene lamps.
Yet that was the least of Morgan's problems as a proud pioneer consumer of electrical power. Each silvery winter afternoon, the noise of the city day ebbed away in the genteel and moneyed streets on Murray Hill. Then the delicious still of the indigo evening mingled only with the occasional soothing clip...
Product details
- ASIN : B000FBJDA2
- Publisher : Random House (August 19, 2003)
- Publication date : August 19, 2003
- Language : English
- File size : 5005 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 464 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #120,022 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3 in Electromagnetism (Kindle Store)
- #9 in Electricity Principles
- #50 in General Technology & Reference
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.
Products related to this item
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book very worthwhile, entertaining, and thrilling to study. They describe the storytelling as interesting, amazing, and incredible. Readers praise the writing quality as well-written, clear, and focused. They say the content is informative, well-researched, and a good mix of technical information and personalities of these pioneers.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book fascinating, entertaining, and historically informative. They say it's well worth the time and a thrilling time period to study. Readers also mention the book is of tremendous value.
"...The other two men are equally amazing characters and make this a fascinating read.Jill Jonnes did an amazing job...." Read more
"...It's a thrilling time period to study, and I don't think I would have wanted to start reading about these men any other way than by reading about..." Read more
"This book is so good they could make it into a movie...." Read more
"...Fascinating book. Highly recommended." Read more
Customers find the storytelling interesting, fascinating, and amazing. They say the book goes into a lot of detail and is well-told by the author. Readers also appreciate the balanced narrative on three great electrical leaders of the late 19th century.
"...It's an amazing chronicle of the early days of how electricity became a part of our everyday lives...." Read more
"...Overall, though, Jill Jones has done an excellent job at portraying the challenges each of these three men faced, their character (good and bad),..." Read more
"This is a splendidly written book, and is essential history for those who seek to anticipate the future...." Read more
"...Empires of Light is a nicely done, balanced history book about a world-shattering period of invention and innovation." Read more
Customers find the writing quality of the book well-written, easy to read, and clear. They also say it's a good read with solid technical details.
"This is a splendidly written book, and is essential history for those who seek to anticipate the future...." Read more
"...Empires of Light is a nicely done, balanced history book about a world-shattering period of invention and innovation." Read more
"I always love well-written history :) Sort of like well-written mysteries...." Read more
"..." I found Ms. Jonnes' book to be both of tremendous value and very easy to read...." Read more
Customers find the content very informative, well-researched, and a good mix of technical information and personalities of these pioneers. They say it provides an excellent overview of the birth of the modern world. Readers also mention the book sparks further study and offers a different insight into these great minds. Overall, they say it's a great book for anyone interested in electricity, invention, and history.
"...Jill Jonnes did an amazing job. The research seems REALLY detailed...." Read more
"...This book did a wonderful job, giving me information on things I didn't know about. Especially on Tesla...." Read more
"...bit of a slog at times, its wealth of interesting anecdotes and solid information makes it a four-star read...." Read more
"...the technicalities of electrical developments were basically understandable and enlightening. (Pardon the pun!...)..." Read more
Customers find the characters amazing and distinct. They say the book portrays the early years of electrical development with brutal capitalism, genuine humanity, and eccentrism. Readers also mention the book does a great job of depicting all three men, their achievements, and flaws.
"...The other two men are equally amazing characters and make this a fascinating read.Jill Jonnes did an amazing job...." Read more
"...She makes these giants human and shows that they had distinct personalities...." Read more
"...This book does a great job of depicting all three men, their achievements, their flaws, their circumstances, and their relations with one another in..." Read more
"...light, it's also a tale of innovation, brutal capitalism, genuine humanity, and eccentrism...." Read more
Customers find the era fascinating, fantastic, and illuminating. They also say the book presents vivid historical characters.
"...Jill Jonnes gives us a fascinating look at the origins of electrical power in the U.S...." Read more
"...and computing, and the book is well-written, well-researched, and presents vivid, compelling historical characters...." Read more
"Magnificent, amazing, fun and yes.. electrifying...." Read more
"...Well researched. It really gives a great picture of the era when we had all the amazing inventions and progress in our country." Read more
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
If you had to compare Westinghouse to someone in 2016 it would be Jeff Bezos. Westinghouse valued innovation and people above profits. The other two men are equally amazing characters and make this a fascinating read.
Jill Jonnes did an amazing job. The research seems REALLY detailed. And since most of the players are gone, I'm sure she had to read VOLUMES of newspapers and books to get this amount of detail.
It's an amazing chronicle of the early days of how electricity became a part of our everyday lives. What's really amazing is how much Nikola Tesla created to really become the architect of our modern day electrical grid. If you're interested in inventors and inventing, you'll love this book.
As a kid, I knew nothing about Tesla. I lived close to many of the places chronicled in this book (Edison's lab and home were in West Orange, NJ where I was raised) and used to visit the Edison National Historic site often. My grandfather actually worked for Thomas Edison and met the man (actually they called him "the old man") on a few occations.
So as a child, Edison was my hero. As an adult I still admired Edison and his tenacity, but Tesla was really a genius. He saw the universe in a really unique way. That info is VERY clear in this book without any opinion from Jill Jonnes.
I understand there's a movie underway chronicling the events in this book.
Although I'm not sure it's really an adaptation of this book.
I loved it. I was sad when I finished it.
btw....I'm a fine artist and I drew the attached portrait of Tesla....on an iPad.
The vast majority of the book is really interesting. There are a few parts where it seemed to bog down a little bit with unnecessary detail, and a little bit of repetitiveness in parts.
Overall, though, Jill Jones has done an excellent job at portraying the challenges each of these three men faced, their character (good and bad), and how the times in which they lived impacted them. Most of all, she shows how they impacted the world.
It's a thrilling time period to study, and I don't think I would have wanted to start reading about these men any other way than by reading about them together, as Jones weaved their stories together in this book. I think understanding them together gives a fairly balanced view of each man that would be harder to get in a single biography of any one of them.
Top reviews from other countries
A quien quiera entender cómo ha revolucionado nuestra vida la electricidad y en modo más general cómo la cambian las nuevas tecnologías, le brindará datos imprescindibles escritos en un estilo atractivo.





