In this Book

  • More New York Stories: The Best of the City Section of The New York Times
  • Book
  • Constance Rosenblum
  • 2010
  • Published by: NYU Press
    • Viewed
    • View Citation
summary

Fifty more essays from famous writers on their incurable love affair with the Big Apple

What do Francine Prose, Suketu Mehta, and Edwidge Danticat have in common? Each suffers from an incurable love affair with the Big Apple, and each contributed to the canon of writing New York has inspired by way of the New York Times City Section, a part of the paper that once defined Sunday afternoon leisure for the denizens of the five boroughs. Former City Section editor Constance Rosenblum has again culled a diverse cast of voices that brought to vivid life our metropolis through those pages in this follow-up to the publication New York Stories (2005).

The fifty essays in More New York Stories unite the city’s best-known writers to provide a window to the bustle and richness of city life. As with the previous collection, many of the contributors need no introduction, among them Kevin Baker, Laura Shaine Cunningham, Dorothy Gallagher, Colin Harrison, Frances Kiernan, Nathaniel Rich, Jonathan Rosen, Christopher Sorrentino, and Robert Sullivan; they are among the most eloquent observers of our urban life. Others are relative newcomers. But all are voices worth listening to, and the result is a comprehensive and entertaining picture of New York in all its many guises.

The section on “Characters’’ offers a bouquet of indelible profiles. The section on “Places” takes us on journeys to some of the city’s quintessential locales. “Rituals, Rhythms, and Ruminations” seeks to capture the city’s peculiar texture, and the section called “Excavating the Past” offers slices of the city’s endlessly fascinating history.

Delightful for dipping into and a great companion for anyone planning a trip, this collection is both a heart-warming introduction to the human side of New York and a reminder to life-long New Yorkers of the reasons we call the city home.

Table of Contents

restricted access Download Full Book
  1. Cover
  2. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Frontmatter
  2. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-xii
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Acknowledgments
  2. p. xiii
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Introduction
  2. pp. 1-4
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Part One: Characters
  1. 2 Strumming toward Self-Awareness: For Years, She Had Seen the Fliers Promoting His Lessons. Then She Inherited a Guitar and Gave Him a Try. Once
  2. pp. 11-14
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 3 Her Private Serenade: His Cheerful Whistling Floated through the Window of Her West Village Apartment, and Captured Her Heart. If Only He Knew
  2. pp. 15-18
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 4 Tom’s World: Sometimes, We Know a Place through One Person. When He Dies, the Whole Neighborhood Goes Pale with the Loss
  2. pp. 19-22
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 5 In Noah’s Room: The Life and Death of a Gifted Young Man with an Unquiet Mind
  2. pp. 23-30
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 10 When Johnny Comes Marching In: The Man in Camouflage Walked into the Literary Bar in the East Village, His Army Backpack Slung over His Shoulder. And No One Said a Word
  2. pp. 60-64
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Part Two: Places in the City’s Heart
  1. 11 Razzle-Dazzle Me: Times Square Is Successful Because People Wait in Huge Hordes, in Numbers the Size of Entire Towns in North Dakota, for the Light to Change
  2. pp. 67-71
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 12 New York Was Our City on the Hill: The City Held Out Unlimited Promise. But the Reality Was a Struggle—for Money, Identity, and a Future
  2. pp. 72-76
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 14 Comfort Food: For a While, He Was a Regular at Frank’s Gourmet Deli on Smith Street in Carroll Gardens. But Some Connections, like Apartment Leases, Are Only Short-Term
  2. pp. 85-87
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 15 The Great Awakening: In the Last Quarter Century, from Riverdale to Tottenville, Waves of Change Have Washed over New York. In Brooklyn, the Transformation Seems Almost Tidal
  2. pp. 88-93
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 19 New York’s Lighthouse: The Building Is the Distinctive Image of Mythic New York, the City of Film and Fiction, and Yet Irresistible
  2. pp. 107-112
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 20 Call It Booklyn: With More Marquee Authors than You Can Shake a Mont Blanc Pen at, Brooklyn May Be the City’s Grimmest Borough for the Up-and-Coming Writer
  2. pp. 113-119
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 21 Breathless, Buoyant: No One Knows a Park, Its Smells and Seasons, Its Contours and Crannies, like a Cross-Country Runner
  2. pp. 120-123
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 22 In the Courtyard of Miracles and Wonders: Ever since Arriving in the City, He Yearned to Visit the Cloistered Haven off West 11th Street. One Starlit Night He Got His Chance
  2. pp. 124-127
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 23 Stranger in a Strange Land: On a Sojourn in a SoHo Hotel after a Flood in His Brooklyn Heights Apartment, Much Looked Familiar. And Somehow Not
  2. pp. 128-131
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 24 Hard Times along Gasoline Alley: The Men Who Hang Out near the Service Stations on Atlantic Avenue Will Pump Your Gas, Fix Your Brakes and Maybe Tell You a Story
  2. pp. 132-138
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 25 A Game of Inches: With the Opening of a New Yankee Stadium, Would Stan’s Sports Bar Be Just a Little Too Far from the Action?
  2. pp. 139-146
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Part Three: Rituals, Rhythms, and Ruminations
  1. 27 The Starling Chronicles: The Baby Bird Was Small and Smelly, Unlikely to Live Long. But She Fell from Her Nest into a Cradle of Love, and Soon She Became a New Yorker, with Wings
  2. pp. 153-159
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 28 A Chance to Be Mourned: After the Death of One of Its Own, a Homeless Group Searches for Easier Ways to Grieve for New York’s Nameless and Unclaimed Dead
  2. pp. 160-167
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 29 Doodles à la Carte: Once a Week the Cartoonists of The New Yorker Assemble for Lunch in Midtown, There to Enjoy a Little Sketch, a Little Kvetch, and a Lot of One Liners
  2. pp. 168-174
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 31 The Urban Ear: New Yorkers Swim in a Sea of Sounds, Most of Them Reassuringly Familiar. Then Once in a While Comes a Very Different Noise
  2. pp. 182-185
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 32 Children of Darkness: They Plumb Tunnels, Trestles and Other Abandoned Places, Often Illicitly, and in Those Shadow Cities Find the Pulsing Heart of New York
  2. pp. 186-192
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 33 Tunnel Vision: Ever since Childhood, She Had Fantasized about a Hidden World below the City Streets. In These Dreams, She Was Not Alone
  2. pp. 193-196
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 35 His City, Lost and Found: Raised in Manhattan, He Is Fascinated by the Changes to His Native Borough. Yet from His Garret across the River, He Does Not Mourn Its Transformation
  2. pp. 201-207
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 36 Any Given Monday: These Men Don’t Dunk. Yet Every Week for 33 Years, They Have Sought to Slow the Passage of Time on the Hardwood Court of a Gym on the Upper West Side
  2. pp. 208-213
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 37 Lemon Zest: The Scott’s Oriole, a Fluffy Yellow Visitor Never Before Sighted in New York, Had Come to Union Square, Where It Seemed Utterly at Home
  2. pp. 214-217
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 38 Tree Proud: The Mayor Pledged to Plant a Million Trees. Sometimes It Takes Just One to Steal Your Heart
  2. pp. 218-221
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 39 Faces in the Crowd: Circling the Jogging Loop in Prospect Park alongside Skinny Ginsberg, Big Tony, and Other Creatures Born of a Fertile Imagination
  2. pp. 222-225
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 40 Fertility Rites: As She Traveled about the City in Search of an Elusive Gift, a Remarkable Thing Happened
  2. pp. 226-229
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 41 His Kind of River: The Indians Called the Hudson “The River That Runs Both Ways,” and Its Majestically Freaky Nature Makes It Easy to Love
  2. pp. 230-233
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 42 Soul Train: When You’re Listening to the Music of the Subway, It’s Easy to Forget Where You Are and Where You’re Going. And You Don’t Even Care
  2. pp. 234-238
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. Part Four: Excavating the Past
  1. 43 A Mother Lost and Found: Had Some Real Estate God Decreed That the Daughter Would End Up in the Greenwich Village Town House Where Her Mother Had Lived 46 Years Earlier?
  2. pp. 241-245
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 46 BoHo, Back in the Day: In the 70’s, the Bums on the Bowery Were Gallant, and an Impressionable Young Woman Could Rent a Sun-Drenched Loft for a Song
  2. pp. 262-265
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 47 Was He the Eggman?: A Dashing Turn-of-the-Century Wall Streeter May Have Invented Eggs Benedict. Or Maybe Not
  2. pp. 266-273
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 48 When He Was Seventeen: You Could Almost Buy a Legal Drink. Parents Didn’t Hover So Much. And If You Were Not Really Tougher than Kids Today, You Certainly Felt like Your Own Man
  2. pp. 274-279
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 49 A Long Day’s Journey into Lip Gloss: How Sephora Ate Her Theater, and Why She Hates to See Blusher Displays Where Sam Shepard’s Losers Used to Slouch
  2. pp. 280-283
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. 50 Always, the Crack of the Bat: Stadiums, in the End, Are Just Window Dressing. The Play’s the Thing
  2. pp. 284-287
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. About the Contributors
  2. pp. 289-293
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
  1. About the Editor
  2. p. 295
  3. restricted access
    • PDF icon Download
Back To Top