His work has been noted as an often comedic avenue into a particularly broad collection of inventions and activities of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, charting perceptions of tools and technologies from electricity[4] and telegraphy[5][6] to common practices of vegetable gardening, the florist business, and fruit growing.[7]
^Ford, Charles (1 December 1912). "Worker Says Easier Here". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
^Warner, Charles Dudley (2015). The Library of the World's Best Literature: An Anthology in Thirty Volumes (2nd ed.). New York: Bartleby.
^Treen, Kristen (2016). "Stereopticon". In Pryor, Sean; Trotter, David (eds.). Writing, Medium, Machine: Modern Technographies. London: Open Humanities Press. pp. 35–51.
^Sterne, Jonathan (2015). "Compression: A Loose History". In Parks, Lisa; Starosielski, Nicole (eds.). Signal Traffic: Critical Studies of Media Infrastructures. Illinois: University of Illinois Press. pp. 31–52.
^Yandell, Kay (2018). "Corsets with Copper Wire: Victorian America's Cyborg Feminists". Telegraphies: Indigeneity, Identity, and Nation in America's Nineteenth-Century Virtual Realm. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 81–104.