Marc J. Seifer is the author of the new book Tesla: Wizard at War: The Genius, the Particle Beam Weapon, and the Pursuit of Power. His other books include Wizard: The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla. He is also a handwriting expert.
Q: What initially fascinated you about Nikola Tesla, and
over how long a period did you work on this book?
A: I was amazed that at the time, which was 1976, that I had
never heard of the person who invented the induction motor, our hydroelectric
power system, wireless communication and what was to become cell phone
technology, that is, the ability to create an unlimited number of wireless
channels, fluorescent and neon lights, remote control, robotics and vertical
takeoff and landing aircraft (such as the Osprey helicopter/airplane).
At first I didn’t think one person could do all this, so I
made Tesla the subject of my doctoral dissertation to go into the heart and
soul of each of these inventions. To my astonishment, Tesla did indeed lay at
the basis of each of these creations.
The dissertation took about six years and then I put in
another eight years of daily work to create Wizard: The Life and Times of
Nikola Tesla: Biography of a Genius.
Ultimately, it took 20 years from 1976 until the book came
out in 1996 and I was gratified to see that Wizard was called “serious
scholarship” by Scientific American and is “Highly Recommended” by the American
Association for the Advancement of Science.
My new book, Tesla: Wizard at War: The Genius, the Particle
Beam Weapon, and the Pursuit of Power, began about eight years ago. During
that time, I helped develop, write and star in the five-part limited TV series
The Tesla Files for the History Channel, now on Amazon.
I was already in the midst of writing the book but because
of the show, which went out to 40 countries, people from all over the world
wrote and sent me amazing new never-before-revealed information on Tesla,
including recently declassified documents from the Soviet Union and letters
between Tesla and the British War Office as WWII was beginning.
Where Wizard covers Tesla’s entire life, year by year, Wizard
at War focuses mainly on Tesla’s link to three wars: the Spanish-American War
of 1898; WWI, where Tesla worked for Telefunken in wireless; and WWII, where
Tesla negotiated with the sale of his particle beam weapon to the Soviet Union
and Great Britain and also gave freely the details to the US War Department.
Q: What would you say are some of the most common
perceptions and misconceptions about Tesla?
A: The most common perception is that Tesla was a genius.
Although he virtually disappeared from the history books and from the American
psyche from about the 1950s through the early 1990s, a few years later, Tesla
rose to become the Greatest Geek Who Ever Lived, beating out 50 other great
scientists such as Newton, Einstein, Edison, Turing, Bill Gates, Steve Jobs,
Marconi, DaVinci, and Elon Musk.
One of the greatest misconceptions about Tesla is that after
his heyday in the 1890s, his work became less and less important. He is often
depicted in old age as a has-been.
In fact, quite the opposite is true. In Tesla: Wizard at War,
I show that a half-dozen Nobel Prize winners sent Tesla happy birthday
congratulations when he turned 75 and he made the cover of Time magazine in
1931.
And that as WWII was brewing, Tesla was negotiating with the
very highest echelons of power in the Soviet Union, Canada, Yugoslavia, Great
Britain, and the United States in his attempts to sell them his particle beam
weapon.
Tesla felt that if all the nations in the world had such a
weapon, war would become obsolete because it would make no sense to go to war
because the defense of a country’s borders would be impregnable.
My new book shows that the leaders of these countries,
including Joseph Stalin, General McNaughton--who was the head of secret weapons
development for Canada and thus for the British Empire--and FDR himself, were
very interested in meeting with Tesla to learn more about his so-called death
ray. This is a very new look at Tesla.
Q: How would you describe the dynamic between Tesla and inventor
Guglielmo Marconi?
A: Tesla offered his wireless equipment to Marconi in the
late 1890s and Marconi passed and then simply pirated it, so Tesla was very
unhappy about Marconi! The big difference between them with regards to who
invented the radio has to do with the difference in their working equipment at
the turn of the century.
Although Marconi was using a Tesla coil, he was using a
spark gap transmitter to transmit Morse Code and could only operate his system
on one line. Tesla was using his oscillators to create continuous waves so he
could transmit voice, pictures, and even power by wireless on multiple
frequencies.
Marconi mostly sent the electromagnetic energy through the
air, whereas Tesla sent it not only through the airwaves, but also by
conduction through the Earth. Tesla’s system was more efficient and is the
basis of modern-day radio, cell phone technology, wireless communication, and
when TV goes through the airwaves.
Q: What about Tesla and Thomas Edison?
A: During the War of the Currents, Tesla along with Westinghouse
were using alternating current (AC) whereas Edison was using direct current or
DC. The difference was that with the Edison system, electricity could only be
sent about a mile power dropping off over distance and then only for lighting.
The Tesla AC system put in at Niagara Falls by Westinghouse,
on the other hand, enabled electricity to be transported hundreds of miles with
no loss of power and AC was used not only to light homes but also to run
electrical equipment such as refrigerators, toasters, the vacuum cleaner, and
also power factories as well. Tesla invented the modern-day electrical grid.
Before Tesla, all the factories were set up along rivers
because they had to be close to the power source. After Tesla, factories could
be placed anywhere. The Tesla hydroelectric power system ran on waterfalls, and
was thus renewable and was clean energy. The Edison system was coal-operated
for lighting villages and thus was adding greatly to air pollution.
So, Tesla and Edison were business enemies during the War of
the Currents, but afterwards, they became friends and when Tesla’s laboratory
burned to the ground, Edison provided Tesla a work space until he could build
another factor. I get into their friendship in Wizard at War.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I am also the author of the Rudy Styne Quadrilogy. Each
book is different, but the middle two are a two-book saga covering WWI and WWII
as a back story. All four are modern-day murder mysteries starring ace reporter
Rudy Styne.
Rasputin’s Nephew is a psi-spy thriller involving the
creation of cybernetic soldiers with paranormal abilities created by an enemy
nation in Eurasia. Although total fiction, this book is based to some extent on
my 15 years as a teacher of parapsychology at Providence College Night School
and my work with such superpsychics as Ingo Swann and Uri Geller.
My ace reporter, Rudy Styne, begins to investigate the
unusual deaths of American parapsychologists and tries to report on this, only
to get resistance from his boss at Modern Times, my fictitious magazine that he
works for. As he gets deeper into the mystery, the cybernetic soldiers are now
sent to kill him.
Doppelganger and Crystal Night are a two-book saga. The
modern story involves ace reporter Rudy Styne on the trail of a major computer
hacker. While en route to interview the Steve Jobs of Germany, Rudy runs into
his doppelganger, and that will tie him to the back story which begins in 1906
with the birth of Abe Maxwell.
Abe’s father is Elias Maxwell, who, along with his brother
Simon, starts a motorworks which evolves into an airline. Since the back story
takes place in the beginning of the 20th century, Simon will end up flying for
the Kaiser during World War I and this will tie him to the Red Baron and Herman
Goering, who were both ace pilots during the Great War.
As we move to the second novel, with Rudy still on the trail
of the computer hacker, he now wants to learn more about his link to his
look-alike, who obviously is German. After finding out that he is not
biologically related to his mother, this becomes a search for his birth parents,
who are more deeply tied to the back story. These two books are a great two-book
saga in the tradition of Exodus, The Winds of War, and Captain Corelli’s
Mandolin.
I happen to also be a handwriting expert, having testified
over 100 times in state, federal, civil and criminal court. Through the years,
I have had a number of amazing cases, so I fictionalized a few of them and
created a murder mystery again starring ace reporter Rudy Styne, trying to
figure out who is murdering handwriting experts and why in Fate Line.
All four novels are completely original. They are not
formula novels. Each deals with real events as well, so the reader not only has
the pleasure of reading a murder mystery, but also interesting information
about parapsychology, World War I, World War II, computer hacking and forgery
detection are also gleaned. Please check them out on Amazon.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb