The initial part where the author talks about the developments of electricity is very well done. Once he gets into politics the book becomes an entirely different animal altogether. The book is pretty recent too, so it talks about events like the Fukushima Nuclear Plant disaster and Enron's Collapse. However, I thought this was going to be purely about electricity and not about electricity distribution. There is a subtle difference between the two concepts and I suppose when you get into the distribution you have to deal with regulation and government. These parts were rather boring though and I couldn't get into them.
It doesn't make the book a complete waste, but it is slightly disappointing.… (more)
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