The Ghosts of Eden Park - The Bootleg King, the Women Who Pursued Him, and the Murder That Shocked Jazz-Age America
At a Glance
Section titled âAt a Glanceâ| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2020-12-01 |
| Journal | The F Scott Fitzgerald Review |
| Authors | Kim Moreland |
Abstract
Section titled âAbstractâThe sensational title of Karen Abbottâs book delivers on its promise of telling the extraordinary story of notorious bootlegger George Remus and his equally extravagant wife Imogene. Both were law-breakers, first with regard to Prohibition and later with regard to murder: piquantly, Imogene hired a hit man who failed at killing George, while George fatally shot Imogene personally and up close, in full view of multiple witnesses at the eponymous Eden Park in Cincinnati, Ohio, on 6 October 1927.An extraordinary amount of research underlies this book of historical nonfiction that reads amazingly like a novel. The 5,500-page transcript of Remusâs murder trial serves as the main historical record but certainly is not the only one. The fifty-seven pages of notes at the end of the incredible tale serve as evidence for Abbottâs assertion that her account includes âno invented dialogueâ (xv). A wealth of historical figures also appears in this book, sometimes in detail and at other times as fleeting references to evoke the spectacular period of the Jazz Age.This insistent emphasis on the bookâs identity as history renders conspicuous its many reviews that reference F. Scott Fitzgerald and particularly Jay Gatsby, both of whom are cited in Abbottâs opening pages (ix) and also in the privileged space on the back cover, where George Remus is identified as the real-life version of the fictional Gatsby. In blurbs on the back cover, we are told that the book is âthe nonfiction answer to The Great Gatsby,â that it âfeels like a Gatsby-era novel,â and that it is âGatsby-era noir at its finest.â These references indicate that readers of this historical narrative will inevitably recognize its relationship to Fitzgeraldâs novel of the Jazz Age.However, for all Abbottâs insistence on her book as history, she also tellingly reveals that she sees Remusâs adventures through the lens of The Great Gatsby. Her epigraph to the book cites the famous lines describing Jay Gatsby springing âfrom his Platonic conception of himselfâ and then going about âthe service of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beautyâ (ix; GGVar 118)âa description equally true of Remus. Even more telling are her titles for each of the three parts into which the book is divided, all of which derive from Nick Carrawayâs observations: âThe Pursued and the Pursuing,â âCareless People,â and âThe Colossal Vitality of His Illusion.âCritics and historians have long identified George Remus as one possible model for Jay Gatsby. Abbott typically refuses this comparison, although she notes that Remus was a notorious figure long before Fitzgerald wrote Gatsbyâthe so-called Bourbon Kingâs murder of his wife postdates the novel by two years, of courseâand that Remus might have served as one of many inspirations (30). It is easy to locate references online to Fitzgerald having met Remus. In 2015, Roy Hotchkiss of the Price Hill Historical Society described an apocryphal photograph picturing âRemus surrounded by the police chief, Al Capone, and Fitzgerald, all in laughterâ (qtd. in Beall). Provocatively, Abbott has it both ways in a 2019 interview in Smithsonian Magazine publicizing Eden Park, first asserting that âthere are these impossible stories that Remus and Fitzgerald met [at the Seelbach Hotel, which is mentioned in Gatsby (GGVar 28)] when Fitzgerald was stationed in Louisville,â and then equivocating, âI donât necessarily think they are trueâ (qtd. in Serratore; emphasis added).The deep historical foundation of Abbottâs book disguises certain fictional elements, notably the inclusion of the thoughts of Remus, Imogene, and other figures. More important is Abbottâs underlying identification of history with absolute truth, not recognizing that received history is itself always a narrative, a version of a story privileged with the dubious label âtrue.â An instructive counterpoint is William Kennedyâs 1975 historical novel Legs, which recounts the life of Jack âLegsâ Diamond, still another bootlegger of the 1920s. The first-person narrator, Marcus Gorman, is Legsâs actual lawyer. But Marcus recognizes that his own long history with Legs is only one story (14), and he encourages the recounting of stories by other figures close to Legs. Their stories differ from Marcusâs, but rather than discounting them, Marcus represents them as equally true, even when they contradict his own story or those of others. Kennedy thus presents history as always already a fiction.Yet there is one more turn of the screw in this complicated relationship between essentialized history and history as inevitably fictional. Abbott recounts that she first became interested in her subject while viewing the HBO series Boardwalk Empire (2010-14). Amid a crowded stage of historical figures that included presidential candidate Warren G. Harding and his mistress, Nan Britton, gangsters such as Arnold Rothstein (an inspiration for Meyer Wolfshiem, of course) and Bugsy Siegel, and Mabel Walker Willebrandt (the first female assistant attorney general in American history, appointed by Harding), the author found herself particularly fascinated by a minor character named George Remus with a habit of speaking of himself in the third person: âI always laughed at those scenes where [Al] Capone, another real-life character the show depicts, is clearly confused about who Remus was referring to and Remus is referring to himself,â Abbott told Smithsonian. âI wondered if he was a real person, and indeed he was.â Delving into the official historical record led to the years of painstaking research that culminated in The Ghosts of Eden Park, although she recognized one truth right away: Remusâs âreal story was so much more interesting and dark and complex than what Boardwalk Empire portrayedâ (qtd. in Serratore).F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald were never fictionalized on the celebrated gangster series, despite their proximity to its Atlantic City and New York settings and occasional Princeton flashbacks. (One of the main storylines in the series involves a âpoor boyâ who, like Amory Blaine in This Side of Paradise, flunks out of college and enters the Army as the United States enters the Great War.) Perhaps, the creators of the show feared such well-known celebrities as the Fitzgeralds would swamp some of the less-familiar colorful personalities like Remus. The persistence with which commentators want to identify real-life inspirations for Jay Gatsbyâone thinks as well of Max Gerlach and Robert Kerrâsuggests the opposite of Abbottâs experience with Boardwalk Empire. For all the investigative reporting done to make the ârealâ Great Gatsby âstand upâ (Laskow), Fitzgeraldâs most famous character is the one who is more âinteresting and dark and complexâ than any acquaintances who may have helped spawn him. Even as well as Abbott tells it, Remusâs story has all the bootlegging and bloodâbut none of the romance.
Tech Support
Section titled âTech SupportâOriginal Source
Section titled âOriginal SourceâReferences
Section titled âReferencesâ- 2010â14 - Boardwalk Empire
- 2019 - The Great Gatsby: A Variorum Edition
- 1920 - This Side of Paradise
- 1975 - Legs