Chicago has been called by many names--that Toddlin' Town, the Windy
City (for its politicians, not weather) and Chi-town, to name a few.
Today, it might be called Lollapalooza Land after its fun-loving and
somewhat rowdy summer fest. But this nickname tracks back to 1908's
boisterous Democratic Party fundraiser for the city's 1st Ward political
machine. Chicago, from 1893 to 1934, was indeed alive with raucous
people, as well as reformers, and this book not only tells their
fascinating stories but also the following: Chicago's first McDonald's
served up beer and politics, not burgers; the devil embodied Clark
Street, but its tail swished all the way north to the opera; the city
was a cartoonist's paradise; world-famous artists, writers, singers, and
musicians drew, wrote, sang, and played in Chicago; and the Levee
District boasted two madame sisters who ran a world-famous palace of
pleasure. Readers will also meet a prizewinning horse without pants,
wonder over an elephant named Princess Alice, hear of the world's
biggest red wagon, find out about the first dinosaur in town, and
discover how Chicago helped mother jazz, ragtime, and the blues.