Introduction ; Part I: September 16, 1920 ; Ch. 1 The Middle of Things ; Ch. 2 The End of the World ; Part II: The Story of Dynamite ; Ch. 3 The First Terrorist Act in America ; Ch. 4 American Roughneck ; Ch. 5 The War At Home ; Part III: A National Crime ; Ch. 6 The Great Detectives ; Ch. 7 Business As Usual ; Ch. 8 Usual Suspects ; Ch. 9 A Perfect Alibi ; Part IV ; Ch. 10 The Anarchist Fighters ; Ch. 11 Illegal Practices ; Ch. 12 The Martyr Who Wasn't ; Part V: On to Russia ; Ch. 13 The "Great Detective" Returns ; Ch. 14 Triple-Cross ; Ch. 15 Red Scare ; Ch. 16 The Roar of the Twenties ; Notes ; Index
Beverly Gage teaches U.S. history at Yale University. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Chicago Tribune, Slate.com, The Nation, and The Washington Post. She has been featured as a guest commentator on the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and in Time magazine.
"Outstanding."--New York Times Book Review
"Ms. Gage is a storyteller...she leaves it to her readers to draw
their own connections as they digest her engageing narrative."--The
New York Times
"Gage has produced an uncommonly intelligent, witty and vibrant
account. She has performed a real service in presenting such a
complicated case in such a fair and balanced way."--San Francisco
Chronicle
"Writer and historian Gage presents a gripping account of class war
and violence during the turn of the 20th century. Weaving the story
of the explosion and botched investigation with a masterful account
of labor unrest over preceding demecades, this is a highly
relevant, hard to put down history of terror and civil liberties in
America."--Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
"The best account of the vicious 1920 cluster-bombing on Wall
Street."--Mike Wallace, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Gotham: A
History of New York City to 1898
"The fearful politics of the last decade are a tale foretold in
this extraordinary history of the original 'war on terrorism' and
its sinister legacies."--Mike Davis, author of Buda's Wagon: A
Brief History of the Car Bomb
"Like all good historians, Beverly Gage is a great story-teller,
and what a timely tale she has to tell in The Day Wall Street
Exploded. With subtlety, precision, and in a captivating prose
style, she recalls for us that moment in September 1920 when 'a
bomb planted on a horse-drawn wagon exploded into the lunchtime
crowd at Wall and Broad.' Her story begins with the deed, but goes
far beyond it to describe the nationwide search for the responsible
'terrorists' and the short- and long-range effects on American
politics, society, and culture of that extended manhunt."--David
Nasaw, author of Andrew Carnegie and finalist for the Pulitzer
Prize for The Chief: The Life and Times of William Randolph
Hearst
"Brisk, suspenseful and richly documented..."--The Chicago
Tribune
"Beverly Gage has written a richly detailed and superbly rendered
history of one of the worst--and most neglected--terrorist bombings
in American history....Gage's account...reads like a great
detective novel."--Journal of American History
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