Weber—The Contemporary West | Spring/Summer 2020 Issue

Page 35

C O N V E R S A T I O N

FERRETING OUT THE MYSTERIES OF HISTORY—

A Conversation with

ERIK LARSON

SUSAN HAFEN “Gripping and important” and “factual and personal” are adjectives seldom applied to the same books, but are used regularly by readers and reviewers of Erik Larson’s work. Larson’s ability to enthrall the reader with suspenseful narrative and delight the historian with detailed depictions of characters from the past is the reason why five of his books have become national bestsellers: Dead Wake (2015), In the Garden of Beasts (2011), Thunderstruck (2006), The Devil in the White City (2003), and Isaac’s Storm (1999). Two of them, In the Garden of Beasts and The Devil in the White City, have been optioned for movie rights. The Devil in

the White City, which juxtaposed the building of the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago with a serial murderer killing his victims near the Fair, won an Edgar Award for nonfiction crime writing, was a finalist for a National Book Award, and stayed on the New York Times’ bestseller lists for over five years. His new book, The Splendid and the Vile, focuses on Winston Churchill from May 10, 1940 (the day when Churchill was appointed prime minister and Hitler invaded Holland) to May 10, 1941 (the night of the Blitz). The coincidence of those dates, exactly one year apart, highlights Larson’s ability to find the unexpectedly fortuitous drama in historical events that shape lives and destinies.


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Articles inside

George Perreault

6min
pages 145-148

Yvette A. Schnoeker-Shorb, About Do Not Feed Signs

2min
pages 149-151

Cheryl Hyde Lewis

1min
pages 143-144

Daniel Edward Moore, In Absentia and other poems

2min
pages 141-142

Mark Jenkins, Boots on the Ground

19min
pages 127-134

Jess Guinivan, Salsola

19min
pages 118-126

Mark B. Hamilton, Through Time, the Joyous Ledges and other poems

7min
pages 135-140

Jim Morgan, Deep Ends

12min
pages 112-117

Jane St. Clair, Hair Like Julia Roberts

22min
pages 94-102

Paul J. Driscoll, Death of the Defender

11min
pages 89-93

Nathaniel Farrell Brodie, Stone, Water, Superstition, and Blood

21min
pages 81-88

Sarah Singh, “Proudly Waving O’re Ole Weber”—A Conversation with Jean Howe Andra Miller

15min
pages 71-76

Robert Joe Stout, My Other Father

8min
pages 77-80

Susan Hafen, Ferreting Out the Mysteries of History—A Conversation with Erik Larson

23min
pages 35-42

Kyra Hudson, Undoing the Work of Historical Erasure—A Conversation with Jesmyn Ward

26min
pages 61-70

Stephen Wolochowicz, Vision Dots: Parts & Portals

4min
pages 15-26

Isabel Asensio, Remapping Contemporary Spanish Literature—A Conversation with Espido Freire

24min
pages 43-51

Angelika Pagel, From Bears to Birds: Visual Storytelling in the Anthropocene—A Conversation with Jane Kim

23min
pages 6-14

Megan M. Van Deventer, Teaching, Prison Education, and Social Justice—A Conversation with Michelle Kuo

15min
pages 54-60

Mikel Vause, Fellowship of the Rope—A Conversation with Sir Chris Bonington

23min
pages 27-34

Espido Freire, How Not to Love Him?

3min
pages 52-53
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