Nikola Tesla Books
Bosonac, Prof. Tomo. "Nikola Tesla and Energy in the Modern World," 15 pp. (Includes Tesla's views on increasing energy.)
Dougherty, John J. "AC-DC - The Research View by EPRI," 4 pp. (Tesla's ideas so far in advance that they were rarely accepted at the time.)
Flugum, Robert W. "AC-DC Research View by ERDA," 6 pp. (Brief mention of Tesla patents.)
Harrington, Dean B., and Drexler, Karl F. "Generators - Meeting Today's and Tomorrow's Needs," 15 pp. 11 (Includes Tesla and Generator history.)
Jenkins, Frank A. "Nikola Tesla: The Man, Engineer, Humanist, Inventor," 16 pp. (An appraisal of the impact of Tesla's personality.)
Korac, Prof. Veljko. "The Inventions and Inspiration of Nikola Tesla," 15 pp. (Resume of Tesla's work, with notes on the contents of the Tesla Museum in Beograd.)
Morin, J. Roland. "The World of Lighting - Past, Present and Future," 14 pp. (Development of polyphase alternating current system considered to be Tesla's most important contribution.)
Popovic, Prof. Vojin. "Research of Nikola Tesla in the Light of His Diary From Colorado Springs," 10 pp. (Diary contains details of investigations for determining nodal points in the earth as a conductor of waves. Comments on "fire globes".)
Wagner, Charles L. "Electrical Energy Transmission," 11 pp. (Resume of Tesla's work in electrical energy transmission.)
White, J. C. "Motors - Mankind's Muscle Power," 8 pp. (Biographical sketch of Tesla's genius and invention of the induction motor.)
Hunt, Inez, and Draper, W. W. Lightning In His Hand - The Life Story of Nikola Tesla. Hawthorne, Calif.: Omni Publications, 1977. 269pp. Originally publ. by Sage Books, Denver, 1964. (Complete biography of Tesla's life and work. Photographs. Important reference work.) (b)
Tesla, Nikola. Moji Pronalasci - My Inventions. Zagreb: Å kolska Knjiga, 1977, 109 pp. (Comparative Serbocroat-English text of series of articles "My Inventions," which appear in Electrical Experimenter, 1919.) (fb)
"Russian Radio Waves," New Realities, 1977, vol. 1, no. 3. (Dr. Andrija Puharich speculates that the Russians have found a way to transmit electric power without wires, based on the work done by Nikola Tesla.) (p)
Anderson, Leland I. "Tesla - A Great Inventor - Last of the Pioneers?", The Lightbulb, 1977, Vol. VI, Issue 2, pp. 4, 10-12. (Reprinted from Journal of Engineering Education, June, 1959; supplemented with illus. Cover illus. See also p. 15 for Tesla quote.) (p)