Genius, Madness, Murder, and the 1939 World's Fair on the Brink of War
by James Mauro
The summer of 1939 was an epic turning point for Americaa brief window between the Great Depression and World War II. It was the last season of unbridled hope for peace and prosperity; by Labor Day, the Nazis were in Poland. And nothing would come to symbolize this transformation from acute optimism to fear and dread more than the 1939 New York Worlds Fair.
A glorious vision of the future, the Fair introduced television, the fax machine, nylon, and fluorescent lights. The "World of Tomorrow," as it was called, was a dream city built upon a notorious garbage dumpThe Great Gatsbys infamous ash heaps. Yet these lofty dreams would come crashing down to earth in just two years. From the fairs opening on a stormy spring day, everything that could go wrong did: not just freakish weather but power failures and bomb threats.
Amid the drama of the Worlds Fair, four men would struggle against the coming global violence. Albert Einstein, a lifelong pacifist, would come to question his beliefs as never before. From his summer home on Long Island, he signed a series of letters to President Roosevelt urging the development of an atomic bomban act he would later recall as "the one great mistake in my life."
Grover Whalen, the Fairs president, struggled in vain to win over dictators Benito Mussolini and Joseph Stalin, believing that his utopian vision had the power to stop their madness. And two New York City police detectives, Joe Lynch and Freddy Socha, who had been assigned to investigate a series of bomb threats and explosions that had terrorized the city for months, would have a rendezvous with destiny at the Fair: During the summer of 1940, in a chilling preview of things to come, terrorism would arrive on American shoresand the grounds of the Worlds Fair.
Yet behind this tragic tableau is a story as incredible as it is inspiring. With a colorful cast of supporting charactersincluding Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, Robert Moses, and FDRTwilight at the World of Tomorrow is narrative nonfiction at its finest, a gripping true-life drama that not only illuminates a forgotten episode of the nations past but shines a probing light upon its present and its future.
"Starred Review. A delightful time capsule, skillfully unpacked." - Kirkus Reviews
"[An] unwieldy narrative...Mauro fails to pull all his threads together coherently, falling short of the mark." - Publishers Weekly
"Enriched by many firsthand reminiscences, this rousingly good story about the origins and aftermath of the 1939 World's Fair will delight students of American cultural history. Highly recommended." - Library Journal
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
James Mauro is a former editor of Spy magazine and executive editor of Cosmopolitan. Most recently he was editorial director for Moffly Media, publishers of the Connecticut periodicals Greenwich, Stamford, Westport, New Canaan Darien, and AtHome. His writing has been featured in Radar, Details, Spy, Psychology Today, and a host of other publications. He lives in Connecticut, where he is at work on his next book.
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