Daily Archives: May 31, 2015

A Bite of the Apple

Although I’ve lived away from it almost as long as I lived in it, New York City will always be home to me. When I say New York City, I mean Manhattan. I was born there on New Year’s Eve, spent my first years living on Broadway, attended the famed H.S. of Music & Art, roamed the fabled coffee houses of Greenwich Village and still live on that island in my dreams.
Returning to “my city” for Book Expo America led me to think of the enduring magnetism of this metropolis where anything is possible – good or bad. And of all the great books that have featured the city for atmosphere or as a catalyst. These should be on your list:

Non-Fiction
Here is New York — E.B. White
World of Our Fathers — Irving Howe
The Great Bridge: The Epic Story of the Building of the Brooklyn Bridge – David McCullough
Just Kids – Patti Smith

Fiction
The Age of Innocence — Edith Wharton
The Great Gatsby — F. Scott Fitzgerald
The New York Stories of Henry James — Henry James
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – Betty Smith
Call It Sleep – Henry Roth
Invisible Man — Ralph Ellison
Breakfast at Tiffany’s — Truman Capote
Wonderful Town: New York Stories from The New Yorker – multiple authors
The Alienist – Caleb Carr

After you take a few bites of “The Big Apple”, I’m convinced you’ll develop a taste that keeps bringing you back.

Footnotes

NYC is noted for excelling at many things; that includes producing and inspiring some of the world’s best writers. Flavorwire shares its list of New York’s 100 most important living writers.

One of my literary heroes is O. Henry (1862-1910). Although he lived only 47 years, he produced some 600 short stories, defined by their keen insights about humanity and usually punctuated with a twist ending. Born in North Carolina, O. Henry moved around the country but his most prolific writing period started in 1902, when he moved to New York City; while there, he wrote 381 short stories. Visit Pete’s Tavern (est. 1864) in Gramercy Park and sit at the booth with the plaque stating that William Sydney Porter — pen name O. Henry — sat in that very same booth when he wrote The Gift of the Magi, his most famous story.

O. Henry loved New York, its people, places and potential. It has been reported that his last words were “Pull up the shades so I can see New York. I don’t want to go home in the dark.”
Amen.