This fascinating account of a French woman's impressions of America in the late nineteenth century reveals an unusual cross-cultural journey through "fin de siecle" Paris, Chicago, and New York. Madame Leon Grandin's travels and extended stay in Chicago in 1893 were the result of her husband's collaboration on the fountain sculpture for the World's Columbian Exposition. Initially impressed with the city's fast pace and architectural grandeur, Grandin's attentions were soon drawn to its social and cultural customs, reflected as observations in her writing. During a ten-month interval as a...
This fascinating account of a French woman's impressions of America in the late nineteenth century reveals an unusual cross-cultural journey through "...