Book Review: The Inventor and the Tycoon by Edward Ball

January 26, 2013
Article first published asBook Review:The Inventor and the Tycoonby Edward Ballon Blogcritics.

About:
The Inventor and the Tycoon by Edward Ball is a non-fiction book about two pioneers, a murder and motion pictures. The author is a National Book Award winner for his previous book Slaves in the Family.

The pub­lisher is giv­ing away one copy to two winners of this book –to enter fill out the Raf­fle­copt­ter form at the end of the post.

  • 464 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385525753

Book Review The Inventor and the Tycoon by Edward Ball

My rating for The Inventor and the Tycoon5

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More Books by Edward Ball

Thoughts:
In The Inventor and the Tycoon, author Edward Ball has infused the famous and the infamous into a story so large it might as well be fiction. The story involves capitalism, money, murder, trains, horse racing ,photography and the beginning of moving pictures.

Leland Stanford, “the richest man west of the Mississippi”, railroad tycoon, robber baron, patron of the arts and a hippophile had one question on his mind: do horses’ hooves leave the ground when they gallop. Enter photographer Eadweard Muybridge who will try to prove Mr. Stanford right and, unbeknownst to the two of them, usher the world into the age of movies.

Muybridge_race_horse_animated
Race horse galloping (from a series of pictures by Eadweard Muybridge

Mr. Ball teases the reader by not telling the story in a chronological order, we start with Muybridge shocking a bunch of rich folks with his horse-in-motion display, move on to a chapter about murder, to a history of Stanford (for which Stanford University is named after), his railroads, Muybridge’s trial, Stanford’s fascination with horses, photography, the trial’s verdict and more. As you can see, the author plants a seed and leaves it alone by moving on to another subject which might or might not be related only to come back to the subject later on. While I am not a fan of this style, Mr. Ball made it work and the several cliffhangers kept me hungry for more.

Due to the structure of the book, the author repeats several key facts which, if were told in order, the reader might have been able to keep in their heads. The structure is odd, but it tells the story of two odd people (even though I have to admit that Muybridge is certainly the one who is more strange) and somehow seems fitting. Muybridge dressed down, smoked a corncob pipe, changed the spelling of his name several time and marries a woman half his age. Stanford headed a large company building the western half of the transcontinental railroad, becoming a US Senator and California’s governor.

One of the more interesting aspects of the book was a short part at the end where Muybridge, who invented a “moving picture” met super-inventor Thomas Edison. The Wizard of Menlo Park is not portrayed very kindly in the book, he “had a habit of borrowing the work of others and not returning it”, taking Muybridge’s idea and basically making it his own while throwing the photographer out and taking credit for the ages.

The book is fun to read, Mr. Ball creates scenes which seemed to be taken out of a novel and make the reading move fast. Peppered throughout the book are photographs demonstrating Muybridge’s skill and evolving experiments of early cinematic magic.

Synopsis:
The book is divided into three parts:
Part one goes back in tome from the 1880s to the 1860s when Stanford became a rich man from his humble beginnings as a shop owner. At the same time Eadweard Muybridge becomes a photographer.

The second part is less organized and takes place during Stanford’s youth (1830s – 1870s not necessarily in order) and skips to Muybridge’s 1876 murder trial.

Two years into his marriage, Muybridge discovered that his wife Flora was cheating on him with her friend Harry Larkyns. During this time, Muybridge also found out that his son Florado might have been fathered by his wife’s lover. In October of that year, Muybridge tracked down Larkyns and shot him point blank. Later that evening Larkyns died and Muybridge was arrested.

During the trial the defense pleaded insanity even though the defendant fully admitted that his actions were deliberate and planned. However, the jury still found Muybridge not guilty on the grounds of justifiable homicide.

Part two then jumps back to Muybridge’s youth (1830s) and ends in the 1850s and 1860s.

The third part of the book is more straightforward, starting where part 2 ended to Muybridge’s death at the beginning of the 20th Century.

Buy this book inpaperor inelec­tronicformat*

More Books by Edward Ball

Give­away

  • Give­away ends: February 2, 2013

  • US/Canada Ship­ping Addresses Only

  • No PO Boxes

  • Win­ners will have 24 hours to write back with their address, oth­er­wise an alter­nate win­ner will be picked

Congratulations: carlscott@, akreese@

Zohar — Man of la Book
Dis­claimer:I got this book for free.
*Ama­zon links point to an affil­i­ate account

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5 Comments

  • CarlJanuary 26, 2013 at 4:04 pm

    Hi Zohar

    This sounds like a brilliant book and I’d like to enter to win one of the available copies. Unfortunately, the Rafflecopter form is for Wiley Cash’s A Land More Kind Than Home which I’ve already filled out. I thought you would like to know.

    Best wishes,
    Carl

    • Zohar - Man of la BookJanuary 27, 2013 at 12:04 am

      Thanks for the heads up Carl, it’s fixed and you can enter now.

      • CarlJanuary 27, 2013 at 7:04 pm

        Thanks, I did. This looks like a great read. Thanks for hosting.

  • OkieJanuary 28, 2013 at 8:17 pm

    I was actually just reading about this book over the weekend and thinking it is something I’d like to look into.

    Thanks for your wonderful review and for hosting this cool contest. 🙂

  • AlyceJanuary 30, 2013 at 12:11 pm

    I would love to enter – it sounds like a fabulous book! The rafflecopter says the giveaway is over, but your deadline says February 2nd; am I still in time to enter?

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