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9780814775721

New York Stories

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780814775721

  • ISBN10:

    0814775721

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2005-05-30
  • Publisher: New York Univ Pr
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Summary

View the Table of Contents. Read Chapter 1.A reminder that there are stories still untold in New York, and writers hard at work to find them for us.--The New York Times Book ReviewYou don't have to have a particular interest in the Big Apple to pick up this book. These are stories of human life in all its quirky richness.... New York Stories is a series of love letters to a city that, for all its problems and peculiarities, beckons people from all over the world.--Boston GlobeRosenblum, who edits the City section, has collected 40 representative pieces that showcase the ups and downs of life in a metropolis that still exerts a gravitational pull on those seeking their fortune. Many of the essays are by well-known authors, such as Jan Morris, Phillip Lopate and Vivian Gornick, but others, equally winning, are by emerging writers. All of the pieces are engrossing and share a painstaking attention to craft. à This is both an excellent addition to New York history and a pleasure for casual browsing.--Publishers WeeklyGiven the subject matter, it should come as no surprise that the pieces evoke a powerful sense of place. Coming as this does from the pages of the New York Times, it is also no surprise that the material is of high literary caliber.--Library JournalIn New York Stories, Constance Rosenblum and The New York Times have assembled a plenty's horn of stories and essays, each chasing a subject too fast, too sly and too big to catch. Thus, as with city life itself, the art is in the pursuit. These rich and splendid pieces not only give us the five senses of New York, but also the heart --strangely tender, funny, dark and out of reach.--Roger RosenblattôThese essays, which range from soulful reflection to sidewalk reportage, are shot through with noun phrases--subway screech, tenement kitchen, Bronx bodega, skyscraper window washer, Second Avenue bus ride--that both render New YorkÆs famous mayhem and at the same time tame it into intimacy.ö--Russell Shorto, author of The Island at the Center of the WorldôThere are eight million stories in the Naked City.ö This famous line from the 1948 film The Naked City has become an emblem of New York City itself. One publication cultivating many of New York City's greatest stories is the City section in The New York Times. Each Sunday, this section of The New York Times, distributed only in papers in the five boroughs, captivates readers with tales of people and places that make the city unique.Featuring a cast of stellar writers--Phillip Lopate, Vivian Gornick, Thomas Beller and Laura Shaine Cunningham, among others--New York Stories brings some of the best essays from the City section to readers around the country. New Yorkers can learn something new about their city, while other readers will enjoy the flavor of the Big Apple. New York Stories profiles people like sixteen-year-old Barbara Ott, who surfs the waters off Rockaway in Queens, and Sonny Payne, the beloved panhandler of the F train. Other essays explore memorable places in the city, from the Greenwich Village townhouse blown up by radical activists in the 1970s to a basketball court that serves as the heart of its Downtown neighborhood.The forty essays collected in New York Stories reflect an intimate understanding of the city, one that goes beyond the headlines. The result is a passionate, well-written portrait of a legendary and ever-evolving place.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(6)
Part I A Sense of Place
1 The House on West 11th Street
7(10)
Three Decades After Young Radicals Blew Up an Elegant Brownstone in Greenwich Village, Echoes of the Blast Linger.
Mel Gussow (March 5, 2000)
2 Spanish Harlem on His Mind
17(8)
As Latinos From Many Lands Stream Into New York, Puerto Ricans Watch, Remembering a Time El Barrio Was Theirs Alone.
Ed Morales (February 23, 2003)
3 The Old Neighbors
25(7)
Who Lives Where We Live? Who Sprinted Down This Hall Smelled Spring From This Window? In a City Where the Past Is Ever Present, Tracing the Footsteps of Those Who Came Before Is a Haunting Journey.
Jim Rosenberger (March 9, 2003)
4 Everyone Knows This Is Somewhere, Part I
32(4)
An Englishman Finds Himself in the City of His Childhood Dreams, a Strange, Lofty, Urgent Presence, Beckoning Westward.
Glyn Maxwell (April 27, 2003)
5 Everyone Knows This Is Somewhere, Part II
36(5)
He Journeyed From the Frozen Wastes of the Great Plains in Search of New York City Cool. He May Have Found It.
Chuck Klosterman (April 27, 2003)
6 Nothing But Net
41(8)
The Basketball Court Was Just a Patch of Asphalt in a West Village Playground, an Empty Page in the Urban Landscape. It Needed Players to Give It Meaning.
Thomas Beller (May 18, 2003)
7 New York's Rumpus Room
49(6)
For Nearly 150 Years, Central Park Has Been the City's Endlessly Changing, All-Frills Heart. It's Hard to Imagine New York Without It.
Witold Rybczynski (June 22, 2003)
8 Manhattan '03
55(8)
The Attacks of September 11 Prompted People Around the World to Articulate How Much New York Means to Them.
Jan Morris (September 7, 2003)
9 Back to the Home Planet
63(4)
My East Side, No-Name Nabe.
Robert Lipsyte (September 7, 2003)
10 Latte on the Hudson
67(8)
New York's Original Starbucks Has Closed. But 162 Remain, and a Day Idled Away in One of Them Reveals That These Marvels of Engineered Mood Have Become the City's Ultimate Study Halls, Offices and Village Green.
Patricia Volk (September 21, 2003)
11 Screech, Memory
75(6)
The No. 2 Train Roared By Not 25 Yards From His Childhood Bedroom, Punctuating All the Rites of His Bronx Youth.
Richard Price (March 28, 2004)
12 Bungalow Chic
81(6)
Discovering the Romance of Rockaway, That Peninsula With an Esteem Problem.
Jill Eisenstadt (April 18, 2004)
Part II Moods and Mores
13 The Allure of the Ledge
87(8)
Working Close to the Clouds, the Window Washer Is the Ultimate Risk Taker, the Ultimate Voyeur.
Ivor Hanson (January 23, 2000)
14 There's No Place Like Home. But There's...No Place
95(10)
A Long Hunt for an Apartment Uncovers Triple Bunk Beds, a Kitchen-Cum-Shower-and Some Insights Into the True Meaning of Home.
Tara Bahrampour (December 31, 2000)
15 The Town That Gags Its Writers
105(6)
The Buzz and Banter of New York, a Novelist Argues, Can Make It Hard to Hear Your Own Voice. Try Gainesville.
David Leavitt (February 18, 2001)
16 Rockaway Idyll
111(8)
Eight in a Bungalow, $250 Each, for a Summer of Stars and Waves.
Field Maloney (September 2, 2001)
17 Waiting to Exhale
119(8)
In a Town of Towers and Tight Spaces, Claustrophobics Yearn to Breathe Free.
Katherine Marsh (January 27, 2002)
18 A "Law and Order" Addict Tells All
127(8)
The TV Series Is a Hit Around the Country. But Its Heart Beats to a New York Rhythm, for Us and Us Alone.
Molly Haskell (April 7, 2002)
19 Look Away
135(4)
The Unwritten Law of Survival in the Teeming City.
Siri Hustvedt (December 8, 2002)
20 On the Run
139(8)
New York, Fast Paced and Deeply Social, Taught Him to Love to Smoke. Now the City Has Changed Its Mind and Demands That He Do the Same.
Denny Lee (June 8, 2003)
21 Marriage of Inconvenience?
147(4)
She Was Living Young and Carefree in the East Village. Then Came the Robbery.
Suki Kim (June 22, 2003)
22 Rain, Rain, Come Again
151(4)
When It Pours in the City, There's a Sense of Limited Possibilities. That's Not So Bad.
Meg Wolitzer (June 29, 2003)
23 The Agony of Victory
155(8)
The Yankees Have Won 26 World Series Titles and 38 Pennants. The Giants, Knicks, Jets, Rangers- Even the Mets-Win Once in a While, Too. So Why Do New York Fans Whine So Much?
Joe Queenan (July 20, 2003)
24 Street Legal, Finally
163(8)
Married. Divorced. In Your 40's. Life Has Its Stops and Starts. Getting Your Driver's License Is One of Them.
Suzanne Vega (August 24, 2003)
25 Time Out
171(4)
Loving the Sport. Hating the Scene. Confessions of a Reluctant Soccer Dad.
André Aciman (November 9, 2003)
26 Wild Masonry, Murderous Metal and Mr. Blonde
175(6)
An Electrical Mistake, an Accidental Death. New Yorkers Learn That Even Their Powerful City Must Kneel Before the Random Hand of Fate.
Jerome Charyn (February 1, 2004)
Part III New Yorkers
27 Love's Labors
181(8)
She and Her Husband Roamed the World in Search of Exotic Plants. Now, Alone in a Bronx Office, Celia Maguire Tends to His Legacy.
Laura Shaine Cunningham (July 21, 2002)
28 Ballpark of Memory
189(8)
Decades Ago, Lawrence Ritter Journeyed From the West Side to Roam the Country in Search of Baseball's Past. He Came Back With Perhaps the Best Book Ever Written on the Sport.
David Margolick (October 13, 2002)
29 The Paper Chase
197(8)
The Collyer Brothers, Harlem's Legendary Pack Rats, Offer a Gruesome Cautionary Tale.
Franz Lidz (October 26, 2003)
30 The War Within
205(8)
A Brand-New New Yorker, He Is Enchanted by the Storied City. But His Tour of Duty in Iraq Has Clouded His View of Himself and of His Adopted Home.
David C. Botti (November 16, 2003)
31 Uptown Girl
213(8)
In Researching Her Book on the South Bronx, Adrian Nicole LeBlanc Absorbed Its Poverty, Its Toughness, Its Glacial Pace. She Also Rediscovered Herself
Adrian Nicole LeBlanc (February 1, 2004)
32 My Friend Lodovico
221(4)
Finding a Soul Mate on Upper Fifth Avenue.
David Masello (February 8, 2004)
33 Fare-Beater Inc.
225(4)
A Former Seminarian Found His True Calling in the Subtle Art of Sluggery.
Jim Dwyer (March 28, 2004)
34 The Ballad of Sonny Payne
229(10)
The Subway Is Filled With Panhandlers. But Perhaps None Is as Beloved as the Man With the White Beard and Gentle Eyes Who Moves Through the F Train.
Steven Kurutz (May 16, 2004)
Part IV City Lore
35 The White Baby
239(8)
In the Botanicas of Spanish Harlem, the Spirits Are Asked to Grant Prayers. But Long Ago, a Visitor Learns, the Gods Cruelly Mocked One Man's Wish.
Ernesto Quiñonez (June 4, 2000)
36 New York, Brick by Brick
247(6)
The AIA Guide, That Admiring, Classic Work on New York's Ad Hoc, Additive Architecture, Offers Its First New Edition in More Than a Decade.
Phillip Lopate (June 18, 2000)
37 Memory's Curveball
253(8)
Thick With the Glaze of Age, the Baseball Evoked Thoughts of a Legendary Team. But It Was Not What It Seemed.
Dan Barry (June 10, 2001)
38 My Neighborhood, Its Fall and Rise
261(8)
Safe But Dreary in the 50's, the West Farms Area of the Bronx Had Grown Desolate in the 70's. Now It's on the Mend.
Vivian Gornick (June 24, 2001)
39 Ship of Dreams
269(8)
In 1780, H.M.S. Hussar Sank Near Hell Gate. Joseph Governali Was in Hot Pursuit, With Good Reason: Legend Says the Frigate Was Laden With Gold.
Tom Vanderbilt (February 17, 2002)
40 The Day the Boy Fell From the Sky
277(8)
Decades Later, a Park Slope Nurse Remembers.
Wendell Jamieson (March 24, 2002)
About the Contributors 285(6)
About the Editor 291

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