THE BOY GENIUS AND THE MOGUL: The Untold Story of Television
Daniel Stashower, . . Random House, $24.95 (304pp) ISBN 978-0-7679-0759-0
The book jacket asserts that it will tell the story of television's "real" inventor, Philo T. Farnsworth, a 14-year-old Idaho farm boy. It's a clever—and accurate—hook, since no one inventor can take credit for the magic black box. What makes Farnsworth unique—aside from an intuitive leap while mowing a hayfield in 1922—is that he outlasted everyone else in his patent battle against RCA's David Sarnoff, who famously said, "RCA doesn't pay royalties. It collects them." Sarnoff makes a good foil: both men struggled up from poverty, Sarnoff by climbing the corporate ladder and Farnsworth by convincing financial backers to fund his research. Unfortunately for Farnsworth, "the era of the solitary inventor was quickly fading." Large, well-funded corporate laboratories were taking their place in the 1930s and reducing the inventor to a contract engineer. Stashower, a journalist and Edgar Award–winning biographer (for
Reviewed on: 03/11/2002
Genre: Nonfiction
Peanut Press/Palm Reader - 182 pages - 978-0-7679-1321-8