Book description
The Chicago World Fair was the greatest fair in American history. This is the story of the men and women whose lives it irrevocably changed and of two men in particular- an architect and a serial killer. The architect is Daniel Burnham, a man of great integrity and depth. It…
Why read it?
27 authors picked The Devil in the White City as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
"Erik Larson's The Devil in the White City is phenomenal. His writing doesn't just share history; he masterfully transforms it into a gripping, immersive story, effectively bringing the past to life. He is one of my favorite authors."
I found the dual plot lines of this book fascinating--doubly fascinating because they were based on actual occurrences. The epic efforts of architect Daniel Burnham to conceptualize, design, and finally engineer the fantastic 1893 Chicago World's Fair was inspiring and breathtaking. Paired with the second narrative describing the grisly deeds of H.H. Holmes, the serial killer whose "murder castle" (located only about a mile away from the Expositions Midway) contained secret rooms, torture chambers, and a hidden crematorium, this tale constructs a sort of unholy yin and yanglike description of how the greatest good and most vile evil can--and do--exist…
This historical account brilliantly weaves together the story of a serial killer with the Chicago World's Fair. It is chilling and authentic.
If you love The Devil in the White City...
It is a book that deep dives into a historical event, in this case, the 1893 World Columbian Exposition. Check. It is a nonfiction book that reads like a gripping thriller, in this case, the serial killer H.H. Holmes, who built a three-story building featuring secret rooms, torture chambers, and a crematorium. Check. Chicago leaps off the page. By the end of the book, I was able to envision the massive exposition, its hundreds of temporary buildings, all white colored, interlaced with ponds and canals.
Much like that exposition helped raise Chicago up from its Great Fire, so I could…
From Patrick's list on Chicago as a main character.
I am not usually a big fan of nonfiction, but with Erik Larson I make an exception. I have read six of his nonfiction works and the one fiction audiobook. The Devil in the White City was the first one I read and my favorite by far. Some of his books are a bit heavy with facts: weather minutiae in Isaac's Storm and air sorties in The Splendid and the Vile. Somehow he manages to make architectural plans and flower planting almost as interesting as the serial killer on the loose in Chicago during the 1893 World's Fair.
This one…
I love true crime, and Erik Larson is a pro. He takes two vastly different but significant events in our world’s history and brings them together. I’ve spent some time in Chicago, and I could easily picture the places he spoke of while recalling the details of the things that went wrong at the World’s Fair, as well as the activities of H.H. Holmes.
I immersed myself in his tails and was with him until the very last page. It was fascinating to learn of all the inventions that were first unveiled at the World’s Fair, as well as the…
From T.K.'s list on bring fame, immerse you, and hook you.
If you love Erik Larson...
I couldn’t put down this book that traces dual stories of the architect who designed the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair and a serial killer who chose his victims from among those who flocked to the city.
One of my great-aunts served as a nurse at the World’s Fair infirmary, and I remember hearing about the fair and her experiences there—how wondrous and magical it had all seemed to a young woman from a small town.
I couldn’t help but think of her when I read about the very dark side of the fair, too. Erik Larson is one of…
From Susan's list on explore history you didn’t know.
Erik Larson is known for his masterful ability to combine meticulous research with rich prose to breathe life into history. This book, with intersecting narratives of a serial killer and a brilliant architect set at the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago, painted such a living picture for me that I still felt stuck to the canvas even when I wasn’t reading.
I learned about astonishing true events and characters I barely knew existed. The contrast between the great inventors on the grand stage of the fair and the killer haunting its shadow was superbly done.
From Jason's list on crime books that explode into larger worlds.
I first read this book in 2019, when I was living in Chicago, as a way to get to know more about the history of the city.
It draws together the lives of two very different men, both inexorably linked the Columbian Exposition in 1893 – architect Daniel Burnham and serial killer HH Holmes. I re-read it this summer and again found myself more transfixed by Burnham’s attempts to build a thing of greatness than by Holmes’ lurid crimes.
It gives you a brilliant sense of the city, of Burnham’s genius and of Holmes’ madness.
If you love The Devil in the White City...
I never leaned toward crime stories, but this true telling of America’s first serial killer, while simultaneously recounting one of the grandest expositions in American history, was too good to put down.
I was shocked by how quickly I devoured this book. It’s the closest you can get to time-traveling to 1890s Chicago. It’s the near-impossible feat of building the greatest World’s Fair of all, and also the gruesome story of a killer building a “murder house” and luring single women into it.
This is the book that inspired Martin Scorsese and Leonardo Dicaprio to almost make it a series…
From Jake's list on American history that read like you’re binge-watching.
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