?Paula Uruburu serves up an intriguing and meticulously researched
slice of American history. Evelyn Nesbit typified the glorious
excesses of the Gilded Age, and this story has everything: sex,
deception, drama, and a lurid love triangle, all culminating in the
crime of the century.?
--Karen Abbott, author of "Sin in the Second City: Madams,
Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America's Soul"
?By centering her book on the ever-fascinating figure of Evelyn
Nesbit?the stunningly beautiful chorine whose sexual charisma still
burns through the Victorian photographs that adorn the book?Uruburu
has produced not only a tour de force of historical crime writing
and an illuminating social history but a rollicking piece of
storytelling: a work that brings to life an entire glittering era
while maintaining a breathless narrative pace.?
--Harold Schecter, author of "The Devil's Gentleman: Privilege,
Poison, and the Trial That Ushered in the Twentieth Century"
?Of all th
aPaula Uruburu serves up an intriguing and meticulously researched
slice of American history. Evelyn Nesbit typified the glorious
excesses of the Gilded Age, and this story has everything: sex,
deception, drama, and a lurid love triangle, all culminating in the
crime of the century.a
--Karen Abbott, author of "Sin in the Second City: Madams,
Ministers, Playboys, and the Battle for America's Soul"
aBy centering her book on the ever-fascinating figure of Evelyn
Nesbitathe stunningly beautiful chorine whose sexual charisma still
burns through the Victorian photographs that adorn the bookaUruburu
has produced not only a tour de force of historical crime writing
and an illuminating social history but a rollicking piece of
storytelling: a work that brings to life an entire glittering era
while maintaining a breathless narrative pace.a
--Harold Schecter, author of "The Devil's Gentleman: Privilege,
Poison, and the Trial That Ushered in the Twentieth Century"
aOf all the famous beauties of a hundred years ago, Evelyn Nesbit
is the only one who would still turn heads today. Paula Uruburu's
triumph is to fix this very modern- looking girl in her proper time
and place, and also to describe the New York of the early 1900s so
vividly that we feel we, too, could be strolling towards the 21st
Street apartment where the teen was seduced by Stanford White--or
sitting in Madison Square Garden on the fatal evening that White
was shot dead.a
--Mike Dash, author of "Satanas Circus: Murder, Vice, Police
Corruption, and New Yorkas Trial of the Century"
aPaula Uruburu has given life to the tragic American story of the
poor, beautiful nymph whose fate is so often entangled withextreme
wealth and the powerful man. Evelyn Nesbit is like a Dreiser
heroineaSister Carrie, Jenny Gerhardtathough hers is a true story,
harrowing in this writer's hands.a
--Martha McPhee, author of "LaAmerica" and "Gorgeous Lies"
aIn "American Eve," a fascinating evocation of a woman and her
times, Paula Uruburu does more than just tell the story of Evelyn
Nesbit. Sex, money, scandal, celebrity, doom--the whole cocktail of
Americaas obsessions is served up here in this intriguing,
addictive book.a
--Zachary Lazar, author of "Sway"
aWonderfully absorbing . . . A lurid tabloid story of yore brought
to fresh life and relevance with remarkable insight, verve and
wisdom. Old New York is laid bare in all its decadence and the cult
of pubescent beauty traced to its source, all with worldliness,
wit, humor, compassion, and suspense. The result is a real
page-turner.a
--Philip Lopate, author of "Waterfront: A Walk Around Manhattan"
and "Writing New York"
aTragic now when a century ago it seemed merely scandalous, the
story of Evelyn Nesbit is a gripping cautionary tale for those who
believe Paris Hilton, Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan are the
first of their kind. How is it that after a century of feminism,
young beautiful women still crash and burn for an eager public?
Using newly available family sources, Paula Uruburu tells Evelyn
Nesbitas story in all its darkness and terror.a
--Honor Moore, author of "The Bishopas Daughter"
aIn "American Eve" a beautiful young woman, a lecherous prince of
New York, and an unstable husband show us how the national sport of
media-fed scandal began. Before the story ends, one man is dead,
another is locked away, and PaulaUruburu has given us a look at an
age of excess that looks remarkably like our own. It is page
turning history at its best.a
--Michael DaAntonio, author of "Hershey: Milton S. Hershey's
Extraordinary Life of Wealth, Empire, and Utopian Dreams"
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