Showing posts with label Wall Street bombing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wall Street bombing. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2013

SIRENS In the Time of Gatsby

When blogger Gabrielle Carolina - one of the sweetest bloggers out there - asked if I'd like to participate in a blog tour highlighting SIRENS around the release of Baz Luhrmann's new film version of The Great Gatsby, I jumped for joy. For one thing, Gabrielle has treated me royally in the past. For another, I was thrilled to support her in her new enterprise, ModPodgeMarketing.

She suggested that I write guest posts for each of ten stops. I decided to make them kind of "mini-lessons" on the 1920s - hopefully not dry lessons, but interesting little facts and tidbits. They are, in a way, linked; if you are curious, you might want to read them in sequence.

Sybil's pants! Downton Abbey
So...we're on the tour now, and here are the stops and the topics en route. And I want to give a shout-out to the fabulous bloggers who participated - and those who reblogged or reposted - THANK YOU!!

1. Alice Marvels blog - How the "Great War" (World War 1) led directly into the Roaring Twenties.

2. Mod Podge Bookshelf - Women's Suffrage in 1920 and those awful corsets (gone forever, we hope.)

3. Rebecca's Book Blog - Women's fashion in the 1920s (one of my favorite subjects): Coco Chanel and those sweet slinky styles.

One of the best clubs of the '20s
4. Chapter By Chapter - How flappers and gents of the 1920s partied like it was 1999.

5. Reading Teen - Prohibition! Or...why speakeasies were also called "blind pigs."

6. Little Library Muse - Gangsters may be cool but really...not. And their molls lived equally short lives.

7. Mundie Moms - There was a Wall Street bombing in 1920? Yes, and the similarities are uncanny.

Flappers!
8. Fire & Ice - Ghosts, spirits, life after death, and Harry Houdini - and what that had to do with the Roaring Twenties.

9. The Book Rat - All that jazz. Satchmo and more. Yeah, baby.

10. Pieces of Whimsy - The Gatsby itself: Scott and Zelda, the novel, the times.

I hope you enjoy these "histories" because I had fun putting them together!

And if you like 1920s fashion, as I do, check out this cool video:


Monday, November 5, 2012

SIRENS Launch Week, Plus

It's SIRENS launch week and I'm very excited to share my latest work with you. (As a reminder - during the entire month of November, every comment on every post on the Wardrobe elicits a donation to the American Red Cross. Plus you might win a copy of SIRENS! See this post for details.)

Now to the business at hand: my launch post! (I'm excited. Did I mention that?)

One of the most evocative scenes in American fiction takes place in a living room in a Long Island mansion and features two girls, Daisy and Jordan, long-limbed and lounging, dressed in white. The scene is in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s THE GREAT GATSBY, set in 1925, the year of its publication. Although not historical fiction in the strictest sense, it is fine fiction in the best sense – and it brings to life the Roaring Twenties in America. Great historical fiction brings the past to life. I can't wait for the movie version due out this summer.

I couldn’t be happier that the 20s are experiencing, forgive the pun, a renaissance. Anna Godberson has released the BRIGHT YOUNG THINGS series, and Jillian Larkin has crafted THE FLAPPERS series; Libba Bray has launched THE DIVINERS.

I'm thrilled to have SIRENS join the mix.

When I did my research I was all prepared for flappers and bootleggers, for gangsters (Al Capone) and gorgeous skimpy clothes (Coco Chanel.) Women got the vote, and writers had the Round Table. The 1920s in America was a wild and crazy time of financial boom and liberated behavior, a period when a fluid and mobile society, combined with the freedom afforded by the automobile and the new working middle class, allowed teens to flee from their parents’ Victorian restrictions. Advertising - the "Mad Men" era - was born, in fact, in the '20s. 

Yes, everybody was on board with dancing and drinking (albeit not legally) and public necking. The 1920s in America were Party Time Central.

But the 1920s was also a time of quiet civil unrest and spiritual exploration. The Ku Klux Klan experienced a rebirth, with open marches and anti-black, anti-immigrant posturing. Immigrants of Italian, Irish, and Jewish extraction were pitted against one another and against society in general. A bomb went off on Wall Street in September 1920, targeting the rich capitalists of the stock exchange but killing clerks, runners and stenographers; it was said to be the work of radical Bolshevists, although no clear culprit was ever found. 

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle engaged in a long-running verbal war with his friend Harry Houdini over the question of spiritualism. Houdini was a pragmatist; he knew magic to be a performance. Doyle believed in spirits and the afterlife, and participated in a movement that experienced a resurgence in the 20s.

The parallels between today and the 1920s-1930s are all too evident: the prosperity of the Roaring Twenties echoed in the 1990s boom; the market crash of 1929 and 1930s depression echoed in the 2000s bust. Post-war trauma today found expression first after World War 1; we fear global pandemic today, but the deadly flu pandemic of 1918 killed millions.

Today we recognize the parallels of our own lives with the past, and maybe make sense of the present. I hope that I added to the "making sense" part of it with SIRENS.

Here's the full trailer for SIRENS, thanks to my talented son Kevin: 






Monday, August 6, 2012

The "Roaring Twenties": Part 1

The 1920's. Flappers and Prohibition. Gangsters and speakeasies. A wild and crazy time that followed the Great War and preceded the Great Depression. So, is that all there is?

Great War Heroes
Not a chance. As I gear up for the launch of my third young adult novel, SIRENS, I thought I might address the Roaring Twenties in all their glory - including a ton of stuff you might not know, a lot of stuff that I learned as I was researching the novel. For example, are you aware that there was a Wall Street Bombing in September 1920 that killed a number of people and was called a "terrorist" threat? Yes? No? Let's start there.

The early twentieth century saw a huge immigrant migration into the United States. In fact, this country wouldn't be the great nation it is without the waves of immigrants who "made good" in the burgeoning economy that followed World War 1 (at the time, it was called the Great War, the war to end all wars). But the immigrants to this country also faced discrimination and isolation. And the Russian Revolution of 1917 generated a fear of socialism and what was called "Bolshevism." It was the time of the Big Red Scare and anything foreign, odd, or not "American" was frightening, especially those thought to be harboring Bolshevik or socialist ideas.
Wall Street, September 1920

Amid all the angst there were terrible incidents: the riots in Chicago and Tulsa, that rose out of racial tension; bombings in 1919 targeting public officials. The temperature was rising, and the Attorney-General, A. Mitchell Palmer, met it with his own guns blazing, raiding meetings in a hunt for "radicals".

And then came a shocking event on September 16, 1920. In the street in front of the office of J.P. Morgan and Co. a bomb went off around noon, just at lunch hour, as clerks were heading out for a bite, as secretaries were taking their breaks. It formed a huge cloud of acrid smoke that rose up between the buildings of Wall Street, shattered windows for blocks, wrecked havoc with Morgan offices, and clouded the air with dust and debris. Thirty people were killed outright, hundreds were wounded. The bomb had been planted in a horse cart parked on the street. The horse did not survive.


But the ostensible target, Mr. Morgan himself, did. He was not at work - he was traveling abroad. Clerks, runners, stenographers, secretaries, brokers' assistants - they were the victims. And the perpetrators? No one knows, to this day. A $20,000 reward was posted (a fortune at the time), but nothing came of it. Two Italians -Sacco and Vanzetti - sentenced to death for their involvement in similar incidents were accused but they were never indicted in the Wall Street case.

September...Wall Street bomb...many innocent people killed...terrorism...fear of foreigners...What amazed me as I researched the 1920s was how many parallels there are between that decade today. This is why I love writing historical fiction - it's like looking in a mirror.

Every couple of weeks leading up to publication (some time in November!) I'll be posting on the 1920s and the interesting stuff I've uncovered. Enjoy!