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January 25, 2006

Hooked from the Beginning

I don't normally post anything about books until I've finished them - or at least made enough progress to have formed solid opinions, so I was a bit surprised myself when I decided to post this about The Devil in the White City; Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America - a book recommended by a friend some time ago (thanks, Mark).

I'm around 20 (yes, twenty) pages in. And I'm hooked. Actually, I was hooked by the end of page 12 - which sent shivers up my spine; shivers made all the more poignant by the fact that the book - which describes events around the Chicago World's Fair - isn't a work of fiction.

A taste:


The women walked to work on streets that angled past bars, gambling houses, and bordellos. Vice thrived, with official indulgence. "The parlors and bedrooms in which honest folk lived were (as now) rather dull places," wrote Ben Hecht, late in his life, trying to explain this persistent trait of old Chicago. "It was pleasant, in a way, to know that outside their windows, the devil was still capering in a flare of brimstone." In an analogy that would prove all to apt, Max Weber likened the city to "a human being with his skin removed."

...

In the first six months of 1892 the city experienced nearly eight hundred violent deaths. Four a day. ... Men shot women, women shot men, and children shot one another by accident. But all this could be understood. Nothing like the Whitechapel killings had occurred. Jack the Ripper's five-murder spree in 1888 had defied explanation and captivated readers throughout America, who believed such a thing could not happen in their own hometowns.

But things were changing. Everywhere one looked the boundary between moral and wicked seemed to be degrading. Elizabeth Cady Stanton argued in favor of divorce. Clarence Darrow advocated free love. A young woman named Borden killed her parents.

And in Chicago a young handsome doctor stepped from a train, his surgical valise in hand. He entered a world of clamor, smoke, and steam, refulgent with the scents of murdered cattle and pigs. He found it to his liking.

The letters came later, from the Cigrands, Williiamses, Smythes, asnd untold others, addressed to that strange gloomy castle at Sixty-third and Wallace, pleading for the whereabouts of daughters and daughters' children.

It was so easy to disappear, so easy to deny knowledge, so very easy in the smoke and din to mask that something dark had taken root.

It was Chicago, on the eve of the greatest fair in history.

Posted by dberger at January 25, 2006 9:10 AM

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