What stands out immediately is that this book isn't trying to teach electricity the way textbooks do. It's trying to help readers finally make sense of it. Instead of starting with formulas or abstractions, this book starts with curiosity, why things work, where power actually goes, how ideas evolved, and why modern conversations around energy, transportation, and climate often collapse under their own confusion. The humor isn't decorative, it's structural, it lowers resistance, readers stay with concepts that would otherwise feel inaccessible or intimidating.
This book is ideal for a STEM curriculum by making electricity approachable for all readers, which is exactly where its value lies
What Is Electricity, and
Where Does It Go When It Leaves the Toaster?
What Is Electricity begins with a question most people have
wondered about but rarely ask aloud. This book invites readers to pause, look beyond the wall outlet, and reconsider the everyday miracle they rely on without thinking. Accessible to curious adults and
younger readers alike, it establishes the tone of the series: inquisitive, friendly, and gently provocative. It reminds readers that not knowing is not a failure - it's an invitation.
Tesla To Toasters To Teslas
The Theory of Electricity
Tesla To Toasters To Teslas is a clever, accessible, and genuinely original exploration of electricity as both a scientific force and a cultural companion. The book succeeds in doing something rare: it demystifies a complex subject without dumbing it down, using humor, curiosity, and everyday objects to invite readers into the story of power.
Adventures of Eddie Current
and His Wired Friends
Introduces electricity not as a technical subject, but as a character-driven adventure. By personifying electrical concepts, you transform invisible forces into relatable personalities: Eddie Current becomes movement and energy, resistance, switches, and circuits become challenges and choices, Electricity is no longer abstract - it's alive, playful, and purposeful.
These books teach us that technology is understandable, not magical or intimidating.