HOME
TO ORDER
SHOPPING CART
CONTACT/FAQS
ABOUT PINEAPPLE PRESS
OUR CATALOG
MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSIONS
AUTHORS
BROWSE BY SUBJECT
African American
Animals
Archaeology
Architecture
Art
Astronomy
Biography
Birds
Carolinas
Children's
Civil War
Cooking
Education
Environment
Fiction
Fishing
Florida Keys
Folklore
Fundraising

Games
Gardening
Georgia
Ghosts
Ernest Hemingway

Hispanic
History
Humor
Ireland
Key West
Law
Law Enforcement
Lighthouses
Literature
Maritime
Mystery
Native American
Nature
Nonprofits
Paleontology
Poetry
Reference
Science
Sports
St Augustine
Storytelling
Travel
Young Readers
THE EDISONS OF FORT MYERS
In 1885, Thomas Edison, age thirty-nine and already a world-famous inventor, met the two great loves of his life: Mina Miller and Fort Myers, Florida. Mina soon became his second wife, and Fort Myers—a remote, almost inaccessible, village on Florida’s southwest coast—became their winter home.

Other tomes tell the global account of Thomas Edison, the American icon named by Life magazine as the “Man of the Millennium.” This book offers a look at his life in his tropical retreat, his “jungle,” where for forty-six years he and his bride sought refuge from the cold winters and the demanding lifestyle of his New Jersey home, laboratory, and business complex.

While in Fort Myers he watched over his extensive botanical gardens, fished from both his boat and his long dock, interacted with the locals, and labored for many hours in his laboratory. Henry Ford and his family lived nextdoor and many dignitaries came to visit, including President-elect Hoover and Harvey Firestone.

The Edisons became an essential part of the Fort Myers story. They made lifelong friendships with townsfolk and joined in local activities until the love affair of the Edisons was cut short by the death of Thomas in 1931. Mina continued to live out her love for Fort Myers and its people until her death in 1947. She gave their winter estate, Seminole Lodge (Thomas’s “jungle”), to the grateful citizens of Fort Myers.

“. . . a meticulous, focused portrait of a great man's love affair with a town and its people, . . . a lyrical and important work of modern history that illuminates a lesser-known dimension of our country’s greatest inventor.” — Neil Baldwin, author of Edison: Inventing the Century
Hardback $24.95
ISBN: 1-56164-312-2
Size: 6 x 9
384 Pages
85 b&w photos
How Many?TitleBindingPriceOrder?
The Edisons of Fort Myers Hardback $24.95
REVIEWS
LINKS
A BIT OF THE BOOK
Discoveries of the Heart
Tom Smoot