Monday, September 28, 2009

THE BOY WHO INVENTED TV

THE BOY WHO INVENTED TV: THE STORY OF PHILO FARNSWORTH, by Kathleen Krull, ill. by Greg Couch (Knopf, 2009). This picture book biography tells the story of Philo T. Farnsworth, credited with inventing, among other things, the first electronic television (U.S. Patent No. 1,773,980).

THE BOY WHO INVENTED TV describes Farnsworth's modest upbringing in Utah and his flash of inspiration while plowing a potato field when he was 14 (which he subsequently described to his science teacher) that led to his development of the first working "image dissector" at age 21.

With illustrations that provide a period "feel," THE BOY WHO INVENTED TV is an excellent introduction to a little-known piece of television history.

2 comments:

Mark Mitchell said...

This is a great short review of what sounds like a fascinating picture book!

I love it when science and technology is introduced this way, with a human story, in children's books! Because it gives meaning to the science and the individual's accomplishment.

Chris Barton's "The Day-Glo Brothers" is another example of a such a book.

Thank you for shining a light on "The Boy Who Invented TV"!

Greg Leitich Smith said...

Thanks Mark!

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