Inventing Niagara, Ginger Strand
Inventing Niagara, Ginger Strand
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Inventing Niagara
Beauty, Power, and Lies

Author: Ginger Strand

Narrator: Karen White

Unabridged: 13 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/23/2008


Synopsis

Americans call Niagara Falls a natural wonder, but the falls aren't very natural anymore. In fact, they are a study in artifice. Water diverted, riverbed reshaped, brink stabilized, and landscape redesigned, the falls are more a monument to man's meddling than to nature's strength. Held up as an example of something real, they are hemmed in with fakery—waxworks, haunted houses, IMAX films, and ersatz Indian tales. A symbol of American manifest destiny, they are shared politely with Canada. Emblematic of nature's power, they are completely human-controlled. An archetype of natural beauty, the falls belie an ugly environmental legacy still bubbling up from below. On every level, Niagara Falls is a monument to how America falsifies nature, reshaping its contours and redirecting its force while claiming to submit to its will.

Combining history, reportage, and personal narrative, Inventing Niagara traces Niagara's journey from sublime icon to engineering marvel to camp spectacle. Along the way, Ginger Strand uncovers the hidden history of America's waterfall: the Mohawk chief who wrested the falls from his adopted tribe, the revered town father who secretly assisted slave catchers, the wartime workers who unknowingly helped build the atomic bomb, and the building contractor who bought and sold a pharaoh. With an uncanny ability to zero in on the buried truth, Strand introduces us to underwater dams, freaks of nature, mythical maidens, and 280,000 radioactive mice buried at Niagara.

From LaSalle to Lincoln to Los Alamos, Mohawks to Marilyn, Niagara's story is America's story, a tale of dreams founded on the mastery of nature. At a time of increasing environmental crisis, Inventing Niagara shows us how understanding the cultural history of nature might help us to rethink our place in it today.

About Ginger Strand

Ginger Strand grew up in Texas, Missouri, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Michigan, but mostly on a farm in Michigan. The author of the novel Flight, she has published essays and fiction in many places, including Harper's, the Believer, the Iowa Review, the Gettysburg Review, Swink, Raritan, the New England Review, and Orion, where she is a contributing editor. A former fellow in the Behrman Center for the Humanities at Princeton University, she has received residency grants from the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and the American Antiquarian Society, as well as a Tennessee Williams scholarship in fiction from the Sewanee Writers' Conference. She lives in New York City.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Tracey on July 17, 2014

I'd first heard about this book on the NPR Fresh Air program 26 May 2008; however, it was as a pass-along from my Mom that I finally had a chance to sit down and read it. I visited the Niagara Falls area back in 1999 and remember clearly the disparity between the US and Canadian sides - now, thanks......more

Goodreads review by Melissa on February 23, 2022

Very interesting. This history weaves in Egyptian pharaohs, the Underground Railroad, the atomic bomb, and a lot more. Next time I visit the falls and surrounding communities, I will have quite a different experience than before.......more

Goodreads review by Jennifer on May 29, 2024

Weird book about a weird place. Wanted to know more about the bday trip destination tho and it did the trick. So much so that I was that girl and interrupted my tour guide with this acquired info. Main takeaway: Niagara Falls can be seen as microcosm of US history: Native American homeland > explorati......more

Goodreads review by David on March 18, 2009

The central premise of this book is that the natural wonder we know as Niagara Falls is in fact an example of how nature is manipulated for man’s own purposes but still sold as “nature.” The author’s love of the subject is obvious--this is as much about her own voyage of discovery as it is about Nia......more

Goodreads review by Jen O'Donnell on August 31, 2019

"He cooked an omelette on the tightrope?" "Mhmm, yeah. That's what I remember most about him." (A conversation between my fiance and I when I had him read the pages about Blondin's tightrope walks across Niagara Falls) Yes, first because love cooking omelettes. But also because I love spectacle, and......more