



Larson also alludes to a great number of new technologies developed in the late 19th century, including the AC light bulbs used to light the World’s Fair at night, the moving pictures Thomas Edison displayed at the World’s Fair, and the various manufacturing processes developed during the 19th century Industrial Revolution, without which the White City couldn’t have been built. The union strikes of the late 19th century, organized by Eugene Debs and Samuel Gompers, are important for understanding Burnham’s negotiations with construction workers and his anxieties about train fares. Jack the Ripper’s serial killings in London and Lizzie Borden’s murders in Massachusetts in 1892 are important precursors to Holmes’s crimes Larson also mentions Leopold and Loeb’s 1924 “crime of the century” on multiple occasions. While The Devil in the White City documents the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago, it alludes to a huge number of related historical events. Larson is highly respected in the journalistic world for his willingness to travel and immerse himself in his research - in order to write Thunderstruck, for instance, he traveled to Nova Scotia, Rome, Munich, Cape Cod, and London. Since Isaac’s Storm, Larson has written several books: The Devil in the White City (2003) Thunderstruck (2006), about the lives of Guillermo Marconi and the serial killer Hawley Crippen In the Garden of Beasts (2011), about an American family living in early Nazi Germany and Dead Wake (2013), about the sinking of the Lusitania. While The Naked Consumer won Larson some good reviews, it wasn’t until 1999, when he published Isaac’s Storm, his bestselling history of the 1900 Galveston Hurricane, that one of his books experienced significant national success. In 1992, he published his first full-length book, The Naked Consumer, about invasions of privacy in modern business. Within five years, he was working as a staff writer for the Wall Street Journal, while also contributing articles for other prestigious publications like Harper’s, The New Yorker, and The Atlantic. In 1978, he graduated from the Columbia School of Journalism. Erik Larson grew up in Long Island, and studied Russian History at the University Pennsylvania, where he graduated summa cum laude (“with highest honors”).
