Atlantic City

The Last Hurrah

Timothy Roberts illustrator Amy S Rosenberg editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Daylight Books

Published:14th May '20

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Atlantic City cover

Andrea Smith, Publicist National print and online campaign Social Media campaign Promotion through: www.daylightbooks.org

This is the story in pictures of Atlantic City, the iconic American shore resort, as it emerges from its latest crisis.This is the story in pictures of Atlantic City, the iconic American shore resort, as it emerges from its latest crisis. The city of 40,000 people has been through many transformations in its history: 19th-Century health retreat, Prohibition-Era speakeasy, mid-century nightclub hub and East Coast gambling Mecca. The near-depression of the late 2000s and increasing competition from the spread of gambling across the country upended many schemes of casino impresarios and other developers. Many blocks of the city were leveled for casinos that never opened. The rate of defaults on home loans was the highest in the nation for a time. At the lowest point of the financial crisis the State of New Jersey took over the city’s finances. Now it seems the tables may have begun to turn. These pictures are an attempt to capture the city and the people who live there.

"Timothy Roberts profiles Atlantic City as it recovers from near bankruptcy to stage another much-anticipated comeback. Steve Hankin, an Atlantic City attorney who Roberts interviewed, commented We've been through so many phases. This is the final one. This is the last hurrah." -  All-About_Photo

"All shot in black and white, Timothy's photographs have a timeless quality. The people Roberts captures are not the high rollers, but regular folk, both residents and visitors, who are there to enjoy Atlantic City's famous beach and boardwalk, rides at the amusement park, fishing off the jetty, among other attractions." - Creative Boom

ISBN: 9781942084792

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

128 pages