I'm looking for an authoritative biography of Nicola Tesla

I’m looking for an authoritative biography of Nicola Tesla. Most of the websites I’ve seen look suspect. I’m particularly interested in sorting out fact from fiction regarding his many inventions. I’m not sure what to believe. Can anyone suggest a good scholarly work on him? I look forward to your feedback
According to some websites he is credited with inventing the fluorescent lightbulb, neon lighting, the electron telescope and the microwave oven. I have my doubts about some of these, though.
davidmich

You’ll probably have better luck looking up Nikola Tesla.

As far as sorting out facts regarding his inventions, you can search for US patents here: Search for patents | USPTO or browse a list of them here: List of Nikola Tesla patents - Wikipedia

Ok. I meant to write Nikola. I’m still after a good biography of him. I want to find out what he actually independently invented or working on, without necessarily having patented it, although of course I am also interested in the latter.
davidmich

Did you check the Wikipedia entry–several books listed in the bibliography:

This looks like a serious biography:

I have a couple. Prodigal Genius: The Life of Nikola Tesla was written by John J. O’neill shortly after he died. O’Neill was a newspaper man who had written extensively about Tesla and has lots of detail about Tesla’s life, although the science is shaky.

A more criticial and objective biography is Tesla: Man Out of Time Paperback by Margaret Cheney but she’s not much better versed in science.

Carlson’s biography, cited above, looks like it may have better technical information but I haven’t read it.

There is an enormous Tesla cult that attributes everything in the 20th century to him. The problem with that is that Tesla’s useful inventions stopped in the 19th century. After that most of what he proclaimed was wild theorizing, based on nothing, because he didn’t have a good understanding of 20th century science. You can work backward, from today’s inventions to vague predictions, and draw a straight line that makes him an unsung supergenius. I don’t buy it for a second.

Thank you Exapno Mapcase. Tesla: Inventor of the Electrical Age W. by Bernard Carlson looks good. I’ll start with that.
davidmich

Thank you Past Tense. Thank you all for your feedback.
davidmich

Cheney’s biography is probably the most widely read and cited, and I find it goshwoggle from end to end. A fan biography of Michael Jackson in which they author insists he could walk on water would be more balanced. in particular, her lack of any scientific understanding makes her GREATLY overstate almost everything Tesla did after his seminal work on AC theory.

Just finished the first half of Carlson’s book “Tesla”. Well worth it. Very informative in so many ways. It combines biographical background with science, business and economics. More than I had anticipated. Thanks.
davidmich