Thomas Hager is an award-winning author of books on the history of science and medicine, including The Alchemy of Air and Ten Drugs: How Plants, Powders and Pills Have Shaped the History of Medicine. He is a courtesy associate professor of journalism and communication at the University of Oregon.
a beguiling history of the City That Almost Was...shining a crisp light on the tensions between private and public development with which we still grapple today. -- Garden & Gun Magazine Electric City is an important story, well told. For decades the Tennessee River valley was a canvas on which visionaries sketched a plan for America's future. Thomas Hager shows how hydropower and political power intertwined in a contest over who should own the river and its resources. A rich cast of characters drafted competing blueprints, each promising to engineer a resolution to the growing divide between urban and rural America. Their failures are as instructive as their successes. --Ernest Freeberg author of The Age of Edison: Electric Light and the Invention of Modern America Electric City offers useful insights into why so many planned projects never come to fruition. -- City Journal as compelling as a good novel...Electric City is an excellent, illuminating narrative about an intriguing moment in American history that wound up having repercussions for generations. -- The Oregonian [a] fascinating, widely-sweeping slice of Americana -- Winchester Sun Engrossing...Hager's portrayal of the key players...is revelatory...A willingness to conjecture sets Hager apart from many of his contemporaries. That this 'Electric City' was only ever a dream does not detract from Hager's masterful storytelling and keen eye for details that bring history of life. -- Southern Review of Books The best books about American history combine larger-than-life participants, engaging writing, and surprising twists and turns that provide both entertainment and the real story rather than mythology. Electric City by Thomas Hager checks every box. This is a book you don't want to miss. --Jeff Guinn New York Times bestselling author of The Vagabonds: The Story of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison's Ten- Thomas Hager's Electric City is a rollicking and well-constructed story about power--electric power, political power, financial power--with a gallery of colorful and deeply human characters fighting to own the future. Hager brings Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, and forgotten progressive giants like George Norris alive on the page. And he untangles complex but important strands of American history for easy inspection. In his capable hands, Muscle Shoals--and the Tennessee Valley Authority--are no longer dusty relics but fascinating examples of the great American experiment. --Jonathan Alter author of The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope With incisive character sketches and insights into the tension between private and public interests, this is an illuminating portrait of a little-known chapter in American history. -- Publishers Weekly