Nikola Tesla Books
Benson, Thomas W. "Wireless Transmission of Power Now Possible," Electrical Experimenter, Mar., 1920, pp. 1118, 1119. (Throws beams of ionizing rays vertically. Says Tesla should have put gigantic arc on top of his Long Island tower.) (p)
Secor, Winfield. "Hello Mars!", Electrical Experimenter, April, 1920, pp. 1248-1250, 1302, 1304. (Discusses methods of signalling. Refers to stray signals picked up by Marconi and Tesla. Opinions of several scientists. Illustrated.) (p)
Kraus, Joseph H. "The Tesla Gasoline Turbine," Electrical Experimenter, July, 1920, pp. 277, 316. (Description of turbine with drawing.) (p)
"Nikola Tesla," Electrical World & Engineer, N. Y., Aug. 7, 1920, P. 272. (Portrait with brief biographical sketch.) (p)
"The Tesla Clock," Science and Invention (Successor to Electrical Experimenter), Aug., 1920, p. 396. (p)
Painter, Benj. F. "Radio Complaints by Amateurs," QST, Dec., 1920, pp. 59, 64. (Letter mentioning that experimenting with Tesla and Oudin coils, produced phenomena of ball lightning.) (p)
Tesla, Nikola. "Developments in Practice and Art of Telephotography," Electrical Review - Chicago, Dec. 11, 1920, pp. 923-925. (Advancements in practice and art of photography and telegraphy combined to perfect transmission of photographs. Early inventions improved and applied to modern conditions. Television to be the next step. Reprinted in Nikola Tesla, Lectures, Patents, Articles, Beograd, 1956.)
The Jugoslavs in the United States of America. New York: Pub. by the Jugoslav Section of America's Making, Inc., 1921. (Brief mention of Tesla, p. 29.) (b)
Behrend, Bernard A. The Induction Motor & Other Alternating Current Motors. N. Y.: McGraw-Hill Co., 1921, 2nd edition. (Tesla's contribution and technical details of the alternating current motors, pp. 1, 107, 126, 263, 264; Appendix: The Tesla patent suit.) (b)
Fiske, Bradley Allen. Invention, The Master Key to Progress. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1921. (Brief mention of Nikola Tesla and the Niagara Falls project, p. 303.) (b)
Prout, Henry G. A Life of George Westinghouse. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1922. (Chapter: The Induction Motor & Meter, covers Tesla's work with George Westinghouse in developing a commercial polyphase induction motor and system for operating them, pp. 121-129. See pp. 152, 163 for other Tesla references.) (b)
Stanoyevitch, M. S., Dr. The Jugoslavs in the United States of America. New York, 1921 (pamphlet). (Tesla, pp. 23, 29.) (b)
Taylor-Jones, E. The Theory of the Induction Coil. Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd., 1921. (Chapter XI - The Tesla Coil - pp. 180-185.) (b)