
You can learn more about this book by reading my review.
Thanks Gary for taking time from your busy schedule to answer a few questions.
Q: Why did you write City of Scoundrels?
A: I wanted to write about a city under extraordinary stress. The evolution of any city, particularly a city of immigrants, involves lots of conflict, with various ethnic, racial, and class-based groups competing against each other for power and prominence. Often, this kind of competition works to the city’s advantage, channeling energies in constructive directions. But 1919 in Chicago was one of those times when the energies of competition turned destructive, and instead of working to build the city, started tearing it apart.Q: The book opens with a dramatic recounting of the Wingfoot air express disaster on July 21st, 1919. I think most readers will be as surprised as I was to learn of this disaster. Why do you think this disaster, the first aviation disaster in American history, is mostly forgotten and what impact did this disaster ultimately have on aviation travel in the beginning of the 20th century?