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A License to Steal

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

As early as the 1940s, Walter L. Shaw was thinking of speakerphones, conference calls, and call forwarding. Of the thirty-nine patents to his credit, those three telephonic breakthroughs were his biggest inventions, yet nobody knows his name. Ahead of the world by decades, Shaw spent a lifetime inventing and patenting the many means of communication we take for granted, but he was repeatedly cheated by shrewd businessmen and big corporations. His son, Walter T. Shaw, was enraged by the ill treatment of his father and embraced a personal mission to even the score. Shaw Jr. became one of the most prolific jewel thieves in U.S. history, while Shaw Sr., in order to make ends meet for his family, was persuaded to put his brilliance to work for the mob.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      A LICENSE TO STEAL would make a fine magazine article. As an audiobook, it comes off as self-aggrandizing, insincere and way too long. Narrator Joe Barrett does a good wise-guy impression, telling the story of Walter T. Shaw, an unrepentant jewel thief and mobster. However, Shaw repeatedly says that the focus of his book is not his own story, but the story of his father, Walter L. Shaw, who created the speaker phone, conference calling, and call forwarding, only to have the inventions ripped off. And then Shaw continues to talk about himself. Barrett does a good "Moustache Pete" and an excellent Sicilian, but Shaw doesn't really have much say. Barrett's talents would be better used in a book of substance. M.S. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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