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The Bishop and the Butterfly

Murder, Politics, and the End of the Jazz Age

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"The 1931 murder of 'Broadway Butterfly' Vivian Gordon exposed an explosive story of graft, corruption and entrapment that went all the way to the top of the state. Wolraich brings a journalist's eye and a novelist's elegance to this story of Jazz Age New York."—New York Times
Vivian Gordon went out before midnight in a velvet dress and mink coat. Her body turned up the next morning in a desolate Bronx park, a dirty clothesline wrapped around her neck. At her stylish Manhattan apartment, detectives discovered notebooks full of names—businessmen, socialites, gangsters. And something else: a letter from an anti-corruption commission established by Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Led by the imperious Judge Samuel Seabury, the commission had uncovered a police conspiracy to frame women as prostitutes. Had Vivian Gordon been executed to bury her secrets? As FDR pressed the police to solve her murder, Judge Seabury pursued the trail of corruption to the top of Gotham's powerful political machine—the infamous Tammany Hall.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from December 18, 2023
      This engrossing true crime tale from journalist Wolraich (Unreasonable Men) examines mobsters and misconduct in 1930s Manhattan through the case of murdered actor Vivian Gordon. Shortly after Gordon—locally known as the “Broadway Butterfly”—was discovered strangled in a Bronx public park in February 1931, authorities unearthed three black leather notebooks in her apartment. Some incriminated powerful men and police officers in criminal activity ranging from gambling to sex trafficking; others included correspondence with an investigative team helmed by then-governor Franklin Roosevelt that uncovered a coordinated effort to frame innocent women for prostitution. Wolraich throws a wide net as he recounts the search for Gordon’s killer and the fallout from her notebooks, roping in a cast of characters that includes vice cops, ex-husbands, madams, mistresses, stool pigeons, bootleggers, theater denizens, and judges including Samuel Seabury—the “Bishop” of the title—who was dragged into the case and followed his instincts all the way to the top ranks of Tammany Hall, helping to bring down New York City mayor Jimmy Walker in the process. Wolraich does a sterling job spinning the investigation into a portrait of wider New York society, all while keeping the pages turning as quickly as in any top-shelf mystery novel. Fans of Erik Larson’s The Devil in the White City will be enthralled. Photos.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2024
      As the Jazz Age plummeted into the Great Depression, one woman's murder captured the country's attention, not for the gruesomeness of the crime but for the unlikely nexus of prominent men who had been part of her tumultuous, tempestuous, and frequently tawdry life. Vivian Gordon was a gold digger and a blackmailer, a gamine beauty who resorted to prostitution and extortion of Manhattan's leading attorneys and police at a time when such criminality was commonplace, thanks to the stranglehold of the Tammany Hall political machine. Her death would have gone unsolved had it not been for the incriminating diaries she left behind. Armed with such salacious evidence, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed Judge Samuel Seabury, the epitome of gentlemanly rectitude, to clean up New York's pervasive mob-boss-enforced culture of conspiracy and corruption. It was an unlikely David-and-Goliath battle, one which historian and journalist Wolraich presents in a massively researched chronicle of fraud and vice that is as relevant today as it was a century ago.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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