I picked up this book hoping it would offer insights about the quirks and oddities of people who are on the front line of inventing, exploring, building a business etc, essentially any form of innovation. Although the book was indeed about that, it was limited to THE USUAL suspects of genius and innovation - Einstein, Edison, Tesla, Benjamin Franklin, Musk, Marie Curie, and of course the unmissable Jobs. Not saying that was disappointing, but it sure was less any more informative than what I already about those icons of radical change.
Yet, I liked the categorization in the book, where the author Melissa Schilling tries to infer qualities of these geniuses that made them them. It's almost like that Machine Learning classification problem, where there's always an outlier, and there are just too many dimensions. For e.g, one line of inference was that all the aforementioned people heavily invested on their ability to sleep less - Tesla averaged two hours a night, Musk constantly 6 hours, Edison was erratic an d barely slept when working, and so was Curie, yet Einstein clocked eight and half hours of sleep on average. Same goes to family ties - Tesla was a celibate, Einstein and Curie had affairs outside of their marriages, Jobs was a complicated family man, Kamen never married - and yet, Franklin and Edison had a decent family by any modern standards! This trend goes on all through the book - everyone but one or two fits a straight line hypothesis.
Despite the book being about very well known giants, I still did get to know a lot of intriguing facts and observations about them, thanks to the author's elaborate bunch of reference books, so extra points for that research and reading! Some tidbits include - after ten thousands of failed attempts at finding out a longer lasting substance for filament, the one that finally worked for Edison was bamboo shred; Elon Musk's grandfather was a Canadian "Technocracy" proponent, who advocated for an extremely interesting concept of dividing the population by seven, making each group work with a start day and a different end day thereby completely eliminating the concept of weekend and still offering a great off-time for workers; Jobs and Woz, during their Blue Box prank days, had called up Vatican at 5:30 in the morning waking up a Bishop; track-coach Bill Bowerman discovered Nike's legendary Waffle Shoes after a real serendipitous waffle; Ben Franklin was the one that invented bifocal lens because he was having different eye-range problems when reading and when...not reading; amongst others. But for me personally, the book put rest one of my long time wanna-dos. I had this theory that by using the temperature of the earth at the core and at the surface, we could find the cooling factor, and thus find the age of the earth. Turns out this was already done by Lord Kelvin in an open, public debate about the age of the earth between himself and Marie Curie. While Kelvin's theory using thermal coefficients gave earth an age of around 20 million years, Marie Curie's, from radioactivity, was FAR more accurate. Oh Lord, how could you miss radioactivity?!? (PUn intended (double pun intended)).
The book also has some enthralling stories about Pierre Curie, Grace Hopper, and Dean Kamel, although it keeps you waiting for more of the him and that page never comes.
Overall, I enjoyed reading the book, but it fell short of my expectations.