Devil in the White City
1. In the note "Evils Imminent,"
Erik Larson writes "Beneath the gore and smoke and loam, this book is about the
evanescence of life, and why some men choose to fill their brief allotment of
time engaging the impossible, others in the manufacture of sorrow" [xi]. What
does the book reveal about "the ineluctable conflict between good and evil"?
What is the essential difference between men like Daniel Burnham and Henry H.
Holmes? Are they alike in any way?
2. At the end of The Devil
in the White City, in Notes and Sources, Larson writes "The thing that
entranced me about Chicago in the Gilded Age was the city's willingness to take
on the impossible in the name of civic honor, a concept so removed from the
modern psyche that two wise readers of early drafts of this book wondered why
Chicago was so avid to win the world's fair in the first place" [p. 393]. What
motives, in addition to "civic honor," drove Chicago to build the Fair? In what
ways might the desire to "out-Eiffel Eiffel" and to show New York that Chicago
was more than a meat-packing backwater be seen as problematic?
3.
The White City is repeatedly referred to as a dream. The young poet Edgar Lee
Masters called the Court of Honor "an inexhaustible dream of beauty" [p. 252];
Dora Root wrote "I think I should never willingly cease drifting in that
dreamland" [p. 253]; Theodore Dreiser said he had been swept "into a dream from
which I did not recover for months" [p. 306]; and columnist Teresa Dean found it
"cruel . . . to let us dream and drift through heaven for six months, and then
to take it out of our lives" [p. 335]. What accounts for the dreamlike quality
of the White City? What are the positive and negative aspects of this
dream?
4. In what ways does the Chicago World's Fair of 1893
change America? What lasting inventions and ideas did it introduce into American
culture? What important figures were critically influenced by the
Fair?
5. At the end of the book, Larson suggests that "Exactly
what motivated Holmes may never be known" [p. 395]. What possible motives are
exposed in The Devil in the White City? Why is it important to try to
understand the motives of a person like Holmes?
6. After the Fair
ended, Ray Stannard Baker noted "What a human downfall after the magnificence
and prodigality of the World's Fair which has so recently closed its doors!
Heights of splendor, pride, exaltation in one month: depths of wretchedness,
suffering, hunger, cold, in the next" [p. 334]. What is the relationship between
the opulence and grandeur of the Fair and the poverty and degradation that
surrounded it? In what ways does the Fair bring into focus the extreme contrasts
of the Gilded Age? What narrative techniques does Larson use to create suspense
in the book? How does he end sections and chapters of the book in a manner that
makes' the reader anxious to find out what happens next?
7. Larson
writes, "The juxtaposition of pride and unfathomed evil struck me as offering
powerful insights into the nature of men and their ambitions" [p. 393]. What
such insights does the book offer? What more recent stories of pride, ambition,
and evil parallel those described in The Devil in the White
City?
8. What does The Devil in the White City add to
our knowledge about Frederick Law Olmsted and Daniel Burnham? What are the most
admirable traits of these two men? What are their most important aesthetic
principles?
9. In his speech before his wheel took on its first
passengers, George Ferris "happily assured the audience that the man condemned
for having ‘wheels in his head' had gotten them out of his head and into the
heart of the Midway Plaisance" [p. 279]. In what way is the entire Fair an
example of the power of human ingenuity, of the ability to realize the dreams of
imagination?
10. How was Holmes able to exert such power over his
victims? What weaknesses did he prey upon? Why wasn't he caught earlier? In what
ways does his story "illustrate the end of the century" [p. 370] as the Chicago
Times-Herald wrote?
11. What satisfaction can be derived from a
nonfiction book like The Devil in the White City that cannot be found in
novels? In what ways is the book like a novel?
12. In describing
the collapse of the roof of Manufacturers and Liberal Arts Building, Larson
writes "In a great blur of snow and silvery glass the building's roof—that
marvel of late nineteenth-century hubris, enclosing the greatest volume of
unobstructed space in history—collapsed to the floor below" [p. 196–97]. Was the
entire Fair, in its extravagant size and cost, an exhibition of arrogance? Do
such creative acts automatically engender a darker, destructive parallel? Can
Holmes be seen as the natural darker side of the Fair's glory?
13.
What is the total picture of late nineteenth-century America that emerges from
The Devil in the White City? How is that time both like and unlike
contemporary America? What are the most significant differences? In what ways
does that time mirror the present?
http://www.webenglishteacher.com/larson.html