cover image The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror and the Rise of the Modern Detective

The Infernal Machine: A True Story of Dynamite, Terror and the Rise of the Modern Detective

Steven Johnson. Crown, $32 (368p) ISBN 978-0-593-44395-8

Bomb-hurling anarchists square off against cops and their newfangled scientific sleuthing in this action-packed history. Bestseller Johnson (Enemy of All Mankind) surveys the American anarchist movement of the 1880s through the 1920s, which launched dozens of terrorist attacks. At the center of the narrative are Russian-Jewish immigrant radicals Alexander Berkman, who shot and stabbed steel magnate Henry Clay Frick in a failed 1892 assassination attempt, and Emma Goldman, Berkman’s sometime lover. Full of rousing speeches, feverish conspiracies, and tearful leave-takings, their soap opera–like story gives the book a romantic sheen. Johnson also explores innovations wrought by dynamite, which enabled New York to build subways and skyscrapers, but also furnished anarchists—and organized criminals—with cheap and easily hidden bombs. The book’s third strand recounts how the NYPD battled bombers with new techniques, including fingerprint identification, a bomb squad, and undercover investigations, one of which foiled a plot to blow up St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Johnson’s entertaining true crime picaresque coalesces around the resonant irony of anarchists who dreamed of a stateless society getting crushed by an ever more powerful surveillance state, embodied by the investigative filing system that future FBI director J. Edgar Hoover deployed to build a successful case to deport Berkman and Goldman in 1919. The result is a captivating saga of vehement political passions quelled by cold technocracy. (May)