Tom Swift Turns 100
Tom Swift is turning 100—and he still doesn’t look a day over 18
- By Danny Heitman
- Smithsonian.com, July 01, 2010, Subscribe
That’s just one more marvel from the fictitious boy inventor, who modestly but quickly took on ventures ambitious enough to entertain generations of readers. Along the way, he inspired more than a few actual innovators, such as Apple Computer co-founder Steve Wozniak and Jack Cover, who developed the Taser.
On July 1, 1910, the Library of Congress issued the copyright for the first Swift book, Tom Swift and His Motorcycle. Dozens of books followed in the first series, and four more series followed. In all there have been more than 100 books, with Tom passing the torch to Tom Jr. in 1954.
“I don’t pretend that they are great literature,” said James Keeline, a Tom Swift scholar and the organizer of the Tom Swift 100th Anniversary Convention, to be held July 16-18 in San Diego. “They are simply fun to read.”
Like many inventors, Tom started small: in the inaugural book, he merely modified his motorcycle. But soon he developed a “photo telephone” that predated the fax machine, a giant magnet to rescue a stranded submarine and a “house on wheels” that anticipated the modern motor home.
John Dizer, author of two guides to the Tom Swift phenomenon, summed up the books’ early appeal: “If Tom could invent something, so could we. With honesty and hard work, we could harvest the reward for our inventions. We might even become rich. Tom did.”
The Swift books “totally had me in that science/sci-fi inventor thinking from an early age, along with many friends,” Wozniak said in an e-mail. “When I had my own child, I found and bought some Tom Swift Jr. books, and they became among his favorites, too. He now works for NASA.”
And when it came time for Cover, who died last year at the age of 88, to name his invention of an electric gun that can temporarily immobilize people, he chose “Taser”—from an acronym for the Thomas Swift Electric Rifle, a Swift creation similar to Cover’s device.
Charles Campbell, a professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering at the University of Southern California, said the Tom Swift Jr. stories provided formative reading in his youth. “My father was an art curator, and my mother was a social worker. Neither side of the family has a scientist in it as far as anyone knows,” Campbell recalled. “I credit my interest in science to growing up in the early days of the space race and to the Tom Swift Jr. stories.”
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Comments (2)
My life-long love of reading about science and technology started with these books. My father found a complete set at a yard sale and brought them home for me when I was about ten-years old. I wonder how many young people of my generation were inspired by these books to delve deeper into science and technology. I read a couple of these to my children (who are adults now) and they enjoyed the stories even though the settings were somewhat (in their minds) archaic. Thank you for the article. Maybe it will encourage some other parents (or grandparents) to dust off some of these books and read them to the newest generation of children.
Posted by John Sorrells on July 10,2010 | 11:53 AM
It should be noted that there is a celebration planned for this in San Diego:
http://www.tomswiftenterprises.com/
Parts of the celebration are already in progress.
Posted by Mike on July 1,2010 | 05:11 PM