The Taj Mahal-built at a cost of nearly a billion dollars-had 120,000 square feet of gaming space and 2,010 guest rooms. The casino and hotel, billed as the “eighth wonder of the world” when it opened in the spring of 1990, made its debut like most big dreams in the last two decades of 20th-century corporate America: with a laser and fireworks display. When we visited five years ago, you could almost hear the death rattle outside of the Trump Taj Mahal, where workers had been on strike since July. Atlantic City, at least as a destination, has been dying for decades. Places become abandoned similarly to how most living things die: slowly, and then suddenly all at once. Post-apocalyptic landscapes are often most notable not for what remains, but for what is missing: the people. Pre-pandemic, it felt novel to explore a ghost town or resort in its off-season. Since the early 1800s, the city, located on a barrier island off the coast of New Jersey, has offered ample opportunities to do both. She enjoys feeding her money into slot machines I prefer to exchange mine for dusty souvenirs. In October, 2016, I took my mom to Atlantic City for her birthday.