Thomas Midgley Jr. cover art

Thomas Midgley Jr.

The Man Who Accidentally Destroyed the Atmosphere: Inventor of Leaded Gas and CFCs—Genius or Villain?

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Thomas Midgley Jr.

By: James G. Edwards II, Rick Stupart
Narrated by: Monica Franklin
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He was hailed as a genius, a visionary who solved some of the most pressing industrial challenges of the early 20th century. But today, Thomas Midgley Jr. is remembered as the man whose inventions did more harm to the Earth’s atmosphere than any single human before him.

In this riveting biography, Thomas Midgley Jr.: The Man Who Accidentally Destroyed the Atmosphere, Rick Stupart unravels the life, work, and legacy of a brilliant chemist whose groundbreaking innovations—leaded gasoline and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)—unleashed environmental disasters still felt around the globe. With meticulous research and captivating storytelling, this book explores how a man celebrated for progress unwittingly poisoned the air we breathe and tore a hole in the ozone layer.

Was Midgley a product of his time—guided by profit and prestige over principle—or the cautionary symbol of science without foresight? Through intimate portraits, corporate secrets, and the ethical dilemmas of invention, this book tackles the enduring question: can genius and catastrophe share the same hands?

Both a biography and a historical warning, this book invites readers to examine how innovation, unchecked by accountability, can reshape the world—for better or for worse.

Perfect for listeners of
The Sixth Extinction, The Poisoner’s Handbook, and The Invention of Nature, this is a must-read for anyone interested in science history, environmental ethics, and the high price of progress.

©2025 2025 (P)2026 ELC Publishing
Engineering Science
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