
Topsy
Michael Daly
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Description
In 1903, an elephant named Topsy was electrocuted on Coney Island, and ever since, this bizarre execution has reverberated through popular culture with the whiff of urban legend. But it really happened, and many historical forces conspired to bring Topsy, Thomas Edison, and those 6,600 volts of alternating current together. In Topsy, Michael Daly weaves them together into a fascinating popular history.
The first elephant arrived in America in 1796, but it wasn't until after the Civil War that the circus entered its golden age, thanks especially to P.T. Barnum and Adam Forepaugh (or 4-Paw). With fantastic detail, Daly brings this world to life: caravans, crooks, and side-shows. And he captures the life of the animals, both the cruelties they suffered and, when treated with kindness, their remarkable feats. Rich in period Americana, and full of larger-than-life characters--both human and elephant--Topsy is a touching, entertaining read.
Product Details
Publisher | Grove Press |
Publish Date | June 03, 2014 |
Pages | 368 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780802146052 |
Dimensions | 8.2 X 5.4 X 1.2 inches | 0.8 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"[A] poignant, grim account of dueling impresarios and the American appetite for curiosities centered on one elephant's life and death. . . . Topsy is a fascinating but disturbing story, a skillfully told and admirably researched reminder of a time not as long ago as we'd like to think."--Wall Street Journal
"[Daly] invoke[s] these creatures . . . with grace and compassion."--New York Times Book Review
"Heartbreaking."--Plain Dealer (Cleveland)
"A lively chronicle."--Dallas Morning News
"A fascinating and moving piece of American history and a meditation on the cost of entertainment and human progress."--Kirkus Reviews
"Bizarre and remarkable . . . Daly's fascinating, nuanced portraits of the seedy sides of the circus's heyday and the dawn of the electric age makes for incredibly entertaining reading."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"This book should be read by anyone who's ever been to the circus. I read it and could not bring myself to put it down. Nor could I bring myself to look at the moment--preserved by Edison's footage and now on YouTube--that this book illuminates so clearly. The story left me a little breathless, and I will never see an elephant in captivity again and not think about Topsy and the cruelty of which we humans are capable. I've always respected Michael Daly as a great New York writer. But here, he reaches out to the world beyond New York and goes deep. The results are extraordinary. He humanizes and speaks for those animals who cannot speak. He touches the hearts of those of us who are not animal activists. I'm not so proud to be a member of the human race today, but I am proud to know someone who should be."--James McBride, author of The Color of Water
"Step right up, folks, and read all about it! The amazing tale of elephants, electricity, Edison and Barnum, stunts, fights and ghastly events. Topsy is a 19th-century reality show that boggles the mind as the pages fly by with events that have you laughing out loud one moment and gasping in disbelief the next."--Tom Brokaw
"Topsy offers a compelling history of late-nineteenth-century scientific genius, American hucksterism, and the chase for the almighty buck; it's a tale of giants; Edison, Barnum, and an elephant, in which the four legged creature comes across as more humane than her fellow players"--Richard Price
"[A] tale of American enterprising spirit gone amok. . . the author's quiet outrage . . . endows an off-the-radar circus story with the fatalistic gravitas of Aeschylus."--Boston Globe
"After seeing Thomas Edison's 1903 film 'Electrocuting an Elephant, ' author Michael Daly had to know more. The result is Topsy, a sad and fascinating story of a circus elephant at the turn of the last century, when America was flexing the new power of electricity. . . . While the tragic conclusion is known from the outset, the journey in Topsy offers continuous surprise."--Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
"Daly's anecdotes will have readers laughing at the bad luck of the sometimes honest circus goers. . . . [and he] skillfully recreates several
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