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MARC Record from Library of Congress

Record ID marc_loc_updates/v40.i06.records.utf8:8612269:2675
Source Library of Congress
Download Link /show-records/marc_loc_updates/v40.i06.records.utf8:8612269:2675?format=raw

LEADER: 02675nam a2200301 a 4500
001 2011276400
003 DLC
005 20120202153036.0
008 120120s2011 ctua b 001 0deng d
010 $a 2011276400
020 $a9780762770106
020 $a0762770104
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn666237647
040 $aBTCTA$beng$cBTCTA$dOCO$dGK8$dLPL$dYDXCP$dCDX$dOCLCQ$dGCD$dDLC
042 $alccopycat
043 $an-us-ny
050 00 $aF128.5$b.W225 2011
100 1 $aWallace, David.
245 10 $aCapital of the world :$ba portrait of New York City in the Roaring Twenties /$cDavid Wallace.
260 $aGuilford, Conn. :$bLyons Press,$cc2011.
300 $axiii, 289 p. :$bill. ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 279-282) and index.
505 0 $a"Gentleman Jim." Part I. The good times mayor: Jimmy Walker -- Prohibition: Sherman Billingsley's Stork Club -- The rise of the mafia. Part I. The three M's: Morello, Masseria, and Maranzano -- The Rise of the mafia. Part II. Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano -- America's most famous madam: Polly Adler -- Queen of the nightclubs: Texas Guinan -- The birth of gossip journalism: Walter Winchell -- America's conflicted queen of vaudeville and comedy: Fanny Brice -- The rise of radio: David Sarnoff -- Dance: The charleston, the black bottom, and Martha Graham -- High Cs and high jinks: Classical music's biggest Scandal: Arturo Toscanini Geraldine Farrar -- Literature of the 1920s. Part I. F. Scott Fitzgerald -- Literature of the 1920s. Part II. Edith Wharton, Anita Loos and Eugene O'Neill -- The Round Table: Alexander Woollcott, Robert Benchley, Robert Sherwood, Franklin P. Adams, Marc Connelly, Harold Ross, and Dorothy Parker -- The witty critic: Dorothy Parker -- The magazines: Henry Luce and Briton Hadden and Time, and Harold Ross and the New Yorker -- New York's lesbian subculture -- Interior design pioneer: Elsie de Wolfe -- The Harlem Renaissance: The Cotton Club, Bessie Smith, and the Harlem Renaissance -- Sports: Bill Tilden and Babe Ruth -- The Ticker-Tape parade: Grover T. Whalen -- "Gentleman Jim." Part II. The party's over: Mayor Jimmy Walker -- The crash and the sign of a better tomorrow: The Chrysler building and architect William Van Alen.
520 $aLooks at the history of nineteen twenties New York City through anecdotes and profiles of people who personified the decade, including Lucky Luciano, Jimmy Walker, Polly Adler, Arturo Toscanini, Alexander Woollcott, and Dorothy Parker.
651 0 $aNew York (N.Y.)$xHistory$y1898-1951.
650 0 $aNineteen twenties.
651 7 $aNew York (N.Y.)$xHistory.$2sears
650 7 $aNineteen twenties.$2sears