Electricity and Magnetism, a volume in Elisha Gray's Nature's Miracles series, offers a lucid, apparatus-centered tour of charge, current, induction, and magnetic action. Interweaving historical vignettes—Volta, Faraday's lines of force, Maxwell's field picture—with plainspoken demonstrations and crisp woodcuts, Gray moves from benchtop effects to power stations. Eschewing heavy mathematics, he shows how dynamos, transformers, telegraph circuits, and early telephones enact the same field laws, exemplifying late nineteenth-century popular science at its best: empirical, practical, and democratically didactic. An accomplished electrical engineer and prolific inventor, Gray co-founded the firm that became Western Electric, created the harmonic telegraph and telautograph, and famously contested priority in the invention of the telephone. Trained at Oberlin and seasoned in shop and laboratory, he writes with a practitioner's economy and a teacher's patience, translating workshop intuitions into household-scale experiments. The book's emphasis on applications and on Faraday-Maxwell concepts betrays a life spent bridging patent office, factory floor, and lecture hall, and a desire to make the new electric age intelligible to non-specialists. Recommended to general readers, educators, and historians seeking a clear, context-rich primer that complements mathematical treatises and captures electrification at the moment it entered everyday life. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable—distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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