Capturing the essence of 19th-century Chicago, The Devil in the White City, tells two tangent stories that revolve around the infamous 1893 World’s Fair. Thrown to memorialize Christopher Columbus’s discovery of the New World and trump …show more content…
With every chapter, he uses descriptive language to lure the audience into the dangerous world of the late 1800’s. Larson has a keen eye for these two stories, and gracefully tells them. Through the narration of Larson, he blends history and crime to generate this nonfiction novel that makes the truth seem unimaginable, He is combining two different subjects in order to effortlessly assemble a renowned nonfiction novel. Larson does an exceptional job trying to merge two different subjects in order to make The Devil in the White City, “”The Devil in the White City,” a book as lively as its title, has the inspiration to combine two distantly related-19th-century stories into a narrative that is anything but quaint” (Maslin 1). Larson saw a connection that other authors did not realize could be, and this makes the novel a huge success. It stands out amongst other nonfiction novels because The Devil in the White City offers something to share two instances where oddity was the reality. The presentation of Larson’s research is engaging for a wide range of people who are intrigued by murder and