My Photo
Name:
Location: Vero Beach, Florida, United States

My name is Pat and I live in Florida. My skin will never be smooth again and my hair will never see color. I enjoy collecting autographs and playing in Paint Shop Pro.,along with reading and writing. Sometimes, I enjoy myself by doing volunteer "work" helping celebrities at autograph shows. I love animals and at one time I did volunteer work for Tippi Hedren's Shambala Preserve.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Twilight at the World of Tomorrow

Twilight at the World of Tomorrow by James Mauro.

Hardcover: 432 pages
Publisher: Ballantine Books;(June 22, 2010)
ISBN-10: 0345512146

The summer of 1939 was an epic turning point for America—a 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 World’s 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 dump—The Great Gatsby’s infamous ash heaps. Yet these lofty dreams would come crashing down to earth in just two years. From the fair’s 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 World’s 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 bomb—an act he would later recall as “the one great mistake in my life.”
Grover Whalen, the Fair’s 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 shores—and the grounds of the World’s Fair.
Yet behind this tragic tableau is a story as incredible as it is inspiring. With a colorful cast of supporting characters—including Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, Robert Moses, and FDR—Twilight 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 nation’s past but shines a probing light upon its present and its future.

This book is one of the thrift shop books... as the covers says: " Genius, Madness, Murder, and the 1939 World's Fair on the Brink of War"  So I took it home.  I knew it was a true story and that I wasn't yet born and 1939 was really the brink of war, a time I seem to like to read about so it had to be good.

Eh... not bad .. interesting, lots of names I remember hearing of like, Einstein, Stalin, Franklin Roosevelt etc. It spoke of the idea of the Worlds Fair, how it finally got going, getting companies and countries to want to have space at the fair ..although the book was not one that I couldn't wait to pick up again.. it was good enough to read it fairly quickly and I learned something I really had not heard of and that was the bombing that happened at the Fair in which 3 bomb squad men got killed... and the inclinations of hatred towards the Nazi's. (I knew of the hatred.. just learning about when it first began).  I also was unaware that it was Einstein who brought to light that the Germans might be making atomic weapons and wrote to Roosevelt... thus was the beginning of the making of the Atomic Bomb.

So there definitely was a learning curve to this book.  And true stores about certain times in history always have background information that I find very interesting to learn about.

This is probably not the book for everyone.. but it is a piece of history if one wants to know about the 1939 World's Fair.

3 Comments:

Blogger OldLady Of The Hills said...

We spent a lot of time at The World's Fair back in those two years.......We lived less than a Half Hour away, and it was an incredibly exciting place to be. The World Of Tomorrow was Spectacular.....! Well, everything was Spectacular!! Billy Rose's AQUACADE was Beautiful and fun and worth going back to many many times.
Do you know that my dear dear Betty worked at the World's Fair, as a dancer and an actress! AMAZING!
I knew nothing about the Bombing---I'm sure my parents hid that from us....I was only 7 going on 8 when The Fair Opened.....But I still have vivid memories of it!
This sounds like an interesting book, my dear Pat!

Hope you are having a Lovely Christmas Day, my dear!!!!

3:30 PM  
Blogger Cath said...

Fascinating book.You're quickly becoming an expert on various times in history, Pat!

6:53 PM  
Blogger Lee said...

That's not a story I'm familiar with...it sounds like it's a very interesting read. Thanks for bringing it to my attention. :)

5:05 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home