"Empress San Francisco is an excellent work, and it will be of interest to students and scholars of world's fairs, American western settlement, urban development, and Progressive Era racial, ethnic, and gender relations, reform movements, and foreign relations."—Elaine Naylor, American Historical Review
"By emphasizing the Pacific Rim and paying attention to Chinese, Japanese, and Latin American voices, Markwyn offers new insight into the limitations to the exercise of American power abroad and implicitly challenges accounts of fairs that are overly comfortable within the safe historiographical confines of the nation-state."—Colin Fisher, Journal of American History
"The beautifully illustrated Empress San Francisco is much more than a social and cultural history of the PPIE; it will be of great interest to students and scholars in the fields of urban history, U.S. imperialism and foreign policy, women’s history, labor history, and the study of race, ethnicity, and nationality in Progressive-era America."—Bonnie M. Miller, Western Historical Quarterly
"This close study of a fleeting but significant event underscores the diversity, vitality, and complexity of not only a city on the cusp of the continent and the century, but also the foundation upon which it, and the nation itself, continues to wrestle with fundamental questions of the meaning of "America" and its place in the world today."—Sherry L. Smith, American Studies
"Markwyn's nuanced reading of many different historical and cultural "texts" under the umbrella of the 1915 World's Fair is a fine example of the author's scholarly alacrity and breadth of knowledge as well as the foundation of a well-told story."—Sarah J. Moore, Historian
"Empress San Francisco provides an impressive, little-known account of this important fair."—Charles Fracchia, Panorama
"This book offers a fresh consideration that focuses on the social and political climate of the Fair, and is essential to any study of early San Francisco in general and the PPIE in particular."—Midwest Book Review
“San Francisco’s Panama-Pacific International Exposition of 1915 was a signal event for imagining the Pacific Rim in the early years of the twentieth century. Markwyn’s wonderful book makes clear that the fair was also a defining moment for the political culture of San Francisco. Hers is a finely crafted analysis and a well-told story of a city-state in the making.”—Robert Rydell, author of All the World’s a Fair and World of Fairs