Sunday, March 18, 2018

https://kniggit.net/2018/01/10/tom-swift-and-his-atomic-earth-blaster-by-jim-lawrence-1954/


Many of Tom Swift's fictional inventions describe actual technological developments or predate technologies now considered commonplace. Tom Swift Among the Diamond Makers (1911) was based on Charles Parsons's attempts to synthesize diamonds using electric current.[5] Tom Swift and His Photo Telephone was published in 1912. Sending photographs by telephone was not fully developed until 1925.[6] Tom Swift and His Wizard Camera (1912) features a portable movie camera, not invented until 1923.[6] Tom Swift and His Electric Locomotive (1922) was published two years before the Central Railroad of New Jersey began using the first diesel electric locomotive.[7] The house on wheels that Tom invents for 1929's Tom Swift and His House on Wheels pre-dated the first house trailer by a year.[6]Tom Swift and His Diving Seacopter (1952) features a flying submarine similar to one planned by the United States Department of Defense four years later in 1956,.[7] Other inventions of Tom's have not happened, such as the device for silencing airplane engines that he invents in Tom Swift and His Magnetic Silencer (1941).[6]


Tom Swift and His Electric Runabout; or, The Speediest Car on the Road, 1910
Tom Swift and His Big Tunnel; or, The Hidden City of the Andes, 1916
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/953




Tom Swift and His Air Scout; or, Uncle Sam's Mastery of the Sky, 1919