Thunderstruck (62 page)

Read Thunderstruck Online

Authors: Erik Larson

BOOK: Thunderstruck
3.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Moffett, Cleveland. “Signor Marconi and Wireless Telegraphy.”
Windsor Magazine
(1899).

Monthly Weather Review.
U.S. Weather Bureau 29 (1902).

Musk, George.
Canadian Pacific Afloat: 1883–1968.
Canadian Pacific, 1968.

Norman-Butler, Belinda.
Victorian Aspirations.
George Allen, 1972.

“Notes.”
Electrician
39, no. 7 (June 11, 1897), pp. 207–8.

Notes on Naval Progress.
Office of Naval Intelligence, General Printing Office, July 1901.

O’Hara, J. G., and W. Pricha.
Hertz and the Maxwellians.
Peter Peregrinus/Science Museum, London, 1987.

O’Neill, John J.
Prodigal Genius: The Life of Nikola Tesla.
Ives Washburn, 1944.

Oppenheim, Janet.
The Other World.
Cambridge, 1985.

Paresce, Francesco. “Personal Reflections on an ‘Italian Adventurer.’” http:// www.marconifoundation.org.

Paterson, John.
Edwardians.
Ivan R. Dee, 1996.

Petrie, Sir Charles.
The Edwardians.
W. W. Norton, 1965.

Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia.
Public Archives of Nova Scotia, 1967.

Pocock, R. E., and G.R.M. Garratt.
The Origins of Maritime Radio.
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1972.

Portrait and Biographical Album of Branch County, Michigan.
Chapman, 1888.

Preece, W. H. “Signalling Through Space Without Wires.”
Electrician
39, no. 7 (June 11, 1897), pp. 216–18.

———. “‘Wireless’ Telegraphy.’”
Page’s Magazine,
August 1902, pp. 131–36.

Priestley, J. B.
The Edwardians.
Harper & Row, 1970.

Read, Donald.
The Age of Urban Democracy.
Longman, 1994 (1979).

Rose, Clarkson.
Red Plush and Greasepaint.
Museum Press, 1965.

Rose, Jonathan.
The Edwardian Temperament 1895–1919.
Ohio University, 1986.

Rosenthal, Michael.
The Character Factory.
Pantheon, 1984.

Schneer, Jonathan.
London 1900.
Yale, 1999.

Seitz, Frederick.
The Cosmic Inventor: Reginald Aubrey Fessenden.
American Philosophical Society, 1999.

Sewall, Charles Henry.
Wireless Telegraphy.
D. Van Nostrand, 1904.

Sexton, Michael.
Marconi: The Irish Connection.
Four Courts Press, 2005.

Shipway, William H. and Lena.
History of the First Methodist Church (Coldwater, Mich.), 1832–1958.
Branch County District Library.

Simons, R. W. “Guglielmo Marconi and Early Systems of Wireless Communication.”
GEC Review
11, no. 1 (1996), pp. 37–55.

Stansky, Peter.
On or About December 1910.
Harvard, 1996.

Tedeschi, Enrico.
Guglielmo Marconi in London.
Hove Books, 1998.

Thoreau, Henry David.
Cape Cod.
W.W. Norton, 1951 (1865).

Traxel, David.
1898.
Alfred A. Knopf, 1998.

The Trial of Hawley Harvey Crippen.
Notable Trials Library, 1991 (1920).

Tuchman, Barbara W.
The Guns of August.
Ballantine, 1994 (1962).

———.
The Proud Tower.
Ballantine, 1996 (1962).

Vyvyan, R. N.
Marconi and Wireless.
EP Publishing, 1974 (1933).

Walkowitz, Judith R.
City of Dreadful Delight.
Virago Press, 1992.

———.
People.
Doubleday, 1929.

Wallace, Edgar.
The Four Just Men.
Dover Publications, 1984 (1905).

Wander, Tim.
Marconi on the Isle of Wight.
TRW Design & Print, 2000.

———. “Radio’s First Home.”
Bulletin of the British Vintage Wireless Society
18, no. 4 (n.d.), 51–52.

Weightman, Gavin.
Signor Marconi’s Magic Box.
HarperCollins, 2003.

Weintraub, Stanley.
Edward the Caresser.
Free Press, 2001.

Wells, H. G.
The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds.
Random House, 1983 (1895, 1898).

———.
Tono-Bungay.
Modern Library, 2003 (1909).

West, Nigel.
GCHQ: The Secret Wireless War, 1900–86.
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1986.

Westman, Eric. “Marconi’s ‘Forgotten’ Transmission.”
Bulletin of the British Vintage Wireless Society
11, no. 3 (January 1987), p. 37.

———. “Marconi’s Tests in 1897.”
Bulletin of the British Vintage Wireless Society
11, no. 4 (March 1987), p. 52.

Whatley, Michael E.
Marconi: Wireless on Cape Cod.
1987.

———.
Common Trailside Plants of Cape Cod National Seashore.
Eastern National, 2003.

Willcox, Philip H. A.
The Detective-Physician.
William Heinemann Medical Books, 1970.

Williams, Guy R.
The Hidden World of Scotland Yard.
Hutchinson, 1972.

Woodruff Place Centennial, 1872–1972.
Official Centennial History Booklet, Jan. 1, 1972. Indiana State Library.

Ybarra, T. R.
Caruso.
Harcourt, Brace, 1953.

A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS

I
AM ONE FORTUNATE AUTHOR.
Not only is this my fourth book with the same publisher, Crown, but it’s my fourth with my beloved editor, Betty Prashker, and my agent, friend and consigliere, David Black. Once again all have proven to be steadfast allies, not flinching—at least not much—even when the manuscript arrived six months late. Betty has a remarkable ability to ease an author’s anxiety. She has edited so many books by so many fine writers that when she says, “Don’t worry, it will all be fine,” you know that indeed there is cause for calm.

At Crown my books have always received maximum support, thanks to the enthusiasm of Jenny Frost, Steve Ross, and Tina Constable, and their secret weapon, the legion of ardent book reps—evangelists, really—who escort Crown’s books into the world. Whitney Cookman made the book jacket beautiful; Janet Biehl, copy editor and savior, made it coherent. Penny Simon, supreme publicist, took on the all-important task of placing this book in the minds of readers. Special thanks go to Lindsey Moore, assistant editor, for cheerily serving as intermediary and finder.

I owe my greatest debt to my wife, Christine Gleason, and my daughters and dog for keeping me sane and relatively stable. It is hard to take yourself too seriously when you have three daughters all in or near their teens, especially if two of them are learning to drive. My wife once again demonstrated her innate talent for editing. She knows that when she receives my manuscript, she suddenly possesses a great deal of power, but she uses that power wisely—though those periodic trains of zzzzz’s in the margin did now and then wrench my soul from its moorings. She was right, though. As always.

I thank my friends Carrie Dolan and Robin Marantz Henig, both excellent writers, for also reading critical portions of the manuscript and advising me on how to adjust the narrative to enhance clarity and pace.

I am grateful also to my Italian teacher, Robert—
Roberto
—Strait, whose gift for acquiring language is exceeded only by his knack for conveying its secrets to his students. Italian is a gorgeous, dynamic language. Even the simplest phrase, if delivered with gusto, can sound magnificent.

My travels for this book occurred at a time when public opinion of America could not have been lower, but I was always treated with kindness and generosity. In Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, everyone is your friend. Immediately. In Italy, everyone wants to feed you. In Britain, every question I asked was met with warmth and humor. And the tea, as always, was marvelous.

I
LLUSTRATION
C
REDITS

Part I:

Guglielmo Marconi portrait reproduced by courtesy of Essex Record Office.

Part III:

Portrait of kite launch courtesy of The Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, MSS Marconi.

Part V:

Portrait of Beatrice O’Brien reproduced by courtesy of Essex Record Office.

Notes and Sources:

Alvin Langdon Coburn,
St. Paul’s from Ludgate Circus
, from the book
London
, 1910; photogravure; Collection of the Prentice and Paul Sack Photographic Trust, courtesy of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Front endpaper:

Bacon’s 1902 Map of London © Old House Books (www.OldHouseBooks.co.uk).

Rear endpaper:

Map of the North Atlantic by Mapping Specialists, Ltd.

A
BOUT THE AUTHOR

E
RIK
L
ARSON IS THE AUTHOR
of
The Devil in the White City,
which won an Edgar Award for nonfiction, was a finalist for a National Book Award, and remained on the bestseller lists of the
New York Times
for well over two years. He also wrote the best-selling
Isaac’s Storm,
about a hurricane that destroyed Galveston, Texas, in 1900. He has written for a variety of national magazines and is a former staff writer for the
Wall Street Journal
and
Time
magazine. He lives in Seattle with his wife and three daughters, and a golden retriever named Molly.

A
LSO BY
E
RIK
L
ARSON

The Devil in the White City

Isaac’s Storm

Lethal Passage

The Naked Consumer

Copyright © 2006 by Erik Larson

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Crown Publishers, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

www.crownpublishing.com

CROWN is a trademark and the Crown colophon is a registered trademark of Random House, Inc.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Larson, Erik

Thunderstruck / Erik Larson.

Includes biographical references.

1. Crippen, Hawley Harvey, 1862–1910.

2. Murderers—England—London—Biography.

3. Murder—England—London—Case studies.

4. Murder—Investigation—Great Britain—Case Studies.

5. Telegraph, Wireless—Marconi system—History. I. Title.

HV6248.C75L37 2006

364.152'309421—dc22

2006011908

eISBN: 978-0-307-35192-0

v3.0

Other books

The Right Mistake by Mosley, Walter
Street Divas by De'nesha Diamond
Watermark by Vanitha Sankaran
The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson
Sabotage on the Set by Joan Lowery Nixon
The Secret to Hummingbird Cake by Celeste Fletcher McHale
The Naked Face by Sheldon, Sidney
Secret Star by Nancy Springer