LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Devil in the White City, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Sanity and Insanity
Modernity and Anonymity
Men and Women
Ego and Cooperation
Civic Pride and American Patriotism
Summary
Analysis
In November of 1892, Prendergast composes a long, rambling letter to A.S. Trude, one of Chicago’s most prominent lawyers. Prendergast writes as if he and Trude are friends. Trude receives the letter, and though he dismisses it, he keeps it, fearing that Chicago is producing more and more unstable men, like Charles Guiteau, who assassinated President James Garfield.
Unlike many of the other characters in Larson’s book, Trude seems to sense that the disturbed people around him are capable of violence. This is because he recognizes the precedent for disturbed men attacking politicians, as in the case of Guiteau and Garfield.