
The Electrifying Fall of Rainbow City
Spectacle and Assassination at the 1901 World's Fair
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Narrated by:
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Callie Beaulieu
In 1901, Buffalo, New York, the eighth biggest city in America, wanted to launch the new century with the Pan American Exposition. It would showcase the Western hemisphere and bring millions of people to Western New York. With Niagara Falls as a drawing card, and with stunning colors and electric lights, promoters believed it would be bigger, better, and - literally - more brilliant than Chicago's White City of 1893.
Weaving together narratives of both notorious and forgotten figures, Margaret Creighton unveils the fair's big tragedy and its lesser-known scandals. From a deranged laborer who stalked and shot President William McKinley to a 60-year-old woman who rode a barrel over Niagara Falls to two astonishing acts - a little person and an elephant - who turned the tables on their duplicitous manager, Creighton reveals the myriad power struggles that would personify modern America. The Buffalo fair announced the new century, but in ways nobody expected.
©2016 Margaret Creighton (P)2016 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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Awesome book - content was great and on the money but the narrator is so slow and monotone - I listened at 1.5 speed just to make it bearable. Buy the book and read it - skip this narration!listen at 1.5 speed
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Buffalo history was great
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I Think Candice Millard Got There First
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I can hardly express how much I enjoyed "The Electrifying Fall of Rainbow City" ... Margaret Creighton is a wicked good storyteller ... the book read more like a mystery making it hard to turn off ... the main characters were enthralling and the villain was a rotten bastard ... the reader, Callie Beaulieu, was very good - she made it an enjoyable listen ... what a great book!Margaret Creighton is a wicked good storyteller
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