Make me a city A novel

Jonathan Carr, 1957-

Book - 2019

A propulsive debut of visionary scale, Make Me a City embroiders fact with fiction to tell the story of Chicago's 19th century, tracing its rise from frontier settlement to industrial colossus. The tale begins with a game of chess--and on the outcome of that game hinges the destiny of a great city. From appalling injustice springs forth the story of Chicago, and the men and women whose resilience, avarice, and altruism combine to generate a moment of unprecedented civic energy. A variety of irresistible voices deliver the many strands of this novel: those of Jean Baptiste Pointe de Sable, the long-unheralded founder of Chicago; John Stephen Wright, bombastic speculator and booster; and Antje Hunter, the first woman to report for the Ch...icago Tribune . The stories of loggers, miners, engineers, and educators teem around them and each claim the narrative in turns, sharing their grief as well as their delight. As the characters, and their ancestors, meet and part, as their possessions pass from hand to hand, the reader realizes that Jonathan Carr commands a grand picture, one that encompasses the heartaches of everyday lives as well as the overarching ideals of what a city and a society can and should be. Make Me a City introduces us to a novelist whose talent and ambition are already fully formed.

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Carr Jonathan
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Carr Jonathan Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Published
New York : Henry Holt and Company 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Jonathan Carr, 1957- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 428 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781250294012
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Carr's intricately woven debut evokes the history of nineteenth-century Chicago while showcasing important but little-known historical figures and fictional people from different walks of life who contribute to its development. The chronologically arranged chapters vary in style, from straightforward narrative to spot-on pastiches of news articles and diaries to excerpts from a compiled alternative history text whose contents are cleverly self-referential. In 1800, Jean Baptiste Pointe de Sable, a trader of part-African descent and the marshy land's first nonindigenous resident, plays a fateful chess game. Other significant characters include schoolteacher Eliza Chappell Porter, developer John Stephen Wright, and engineer Ellis Chesbrough. Their and their descendants' lives are full of incident, including the Battle of Fort Dearborn and the Great Chicago Fire. While their personalities are colorfully rendered, the depictions of Native Americans aren't terribly nuanced. More eclectic than Micheneresque, the novel nonetheless offers a strong sense of place. Ambition, injustice, and opportunity all play roles as Chicago expands outward and upward. Over time, the disparate stories, which span the entire century, intersect in delightfully unexpected ways.--Sarah Johnson Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Carr's enticing debut is an "alternative history" of the first 100 years of Chicago's history as a city, using real-life historical figures to tell of a century of idealism, optimism, imagination, risk, and corruption. The book begins in 1800 with a chess game determining who would be the founder of Chicago, a homesteading mulatto or a drunken white man, and ends in 1900 with the opening of Chicago's Sanitary and Ship Canal, an engineering marvel. Through the decades, dreamers, speculators, inventors, politicians, and scoundrels are connected by Carr's clever use of a dented copper kettle, a silver watch, and an old painting passing through the generations. Carr introduces John Wright, an irrepressible land speculator and hopeless romantic; Eliza Chappell, Chicago's first schoolteacher; civil engineer Ellis Chesbrough; the city's first female newspaper reporter, Antje Hunter; nutty inventor Jearum Atkins; Irish politician and crook Oscar Brody; charlatan and petty thief James Cloke; and other fascinating characters. Significant historical events and thorny social issues are here, too, including the creation of the Chicago Anti-Slavery Society, the Great Fire of 1873, the anarchist Haymarket riots in 1886, the World's Fair in 1893, pollution, political and financial corruption, and even murder. This is a gritty and entertaining fictional history of a great American city. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT What is the history of a city if not an amalgamation of myths, stories, and archival documents? Carr's debut novel is an impressive literary experiment blending epistolary narratives, fragmented journal entries, and historical book chapters into a sprawling chronicle about the founding and development of Chicago in the 19th century. The story begins with Jean Baptiste Point du Sable (of African descent) establishing a settlement in 1785 and then proceeds chronologically, focusing on the key figures in Chicago's accelerated growth. Because chapters rotate between literary forms and time periods, readers may find the narrative structure challenging to follow. However, Carr effectively weaves the stories of his sprawling cast of minor and major figures to underscore the city's myriad threads of development: economic, political, and social. With minimal dialog, he melds the historical construction of the railroad and canals with a population struggling to define its political and social stratification during the Civil War. VERDICT An ambitious literary debut that occupies a liminal space between alternative history and experimental literature.-Joshua Finnell, Colgate Univ., Hamilton, NY © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The rise of Chicago in the 19th century provides the frame for a trove of colorful stories and characters in this entertaining debut novel.The first chapter begins with a wink, a label describing it as an "Extract from Chicago: An Alternative History 1800-1900." That conceit also prepares for the book's variety of textual "sources," including a journal, letters, a chapbook, newspaper clips, an interview, and, in a meta wink, a book review of the alternative history. They give a period feel, add colorful voices via dialect and accents, and allow Carr some narrative maneuvers. The story traces the building of the city from muddy streets to bubble-frame houses, sewage systems, and skyscrapers while following several characters across generations. One is the city's first settler, whose father was a white Frenchman and mother, "a free-born slave"; his great-granddaughter will become a journalist and take on powerful politicians, putting her life at risk in a chilling scene. Another is a dreamer and booster of Chicago who begins with land speculation, goes bankrupt twice, and plays a crucial role in making the city a railroad hub. He is also foiled in a romance that will echo across years. Elsewhere a teen nearly killed while trying to break up a logjam delaying timber shipments to the growing city will become a building inspector and target of the same corrupt politicians the journalist pursues. A few historical figures have cameos, although Ellis Chesbrough, the engineer who designed Chicago's sewer system, gets a sizable role linked to the fictional players. Melodrama mars a few scenes, and the frequent shifts in voice and style may test some readers' patience. For the most part, Carr has a sure touch, and in many extended anecdotes, his narrative skills show exceptional detail, pacing, and tension.A solid storyteller enlivens a rich patch of American history. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.