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Do yourself a favor and take Fodor's NYC as your companion.Review Date: 2002-06-20
Want to support the USA? Visit NYC today.Review Date: 2002-05-22
This book is divided into different chapters, the first dealing mainly with Manhattan and its different neighborhoods. Want to visit the grill/movie studio owned by actor Robert De Niro? It's in here. Want to visit the former homes of any number of famous New Yorkers? Or the bar in which poet Dylan Thomas supposedly drank himself to death? The restaurants where Hemingway and others wrote? Prohibition-era speakeasy's? All these and much more are expounded upon.
There is a dizzying array of info on museums, nightclubs, music clubs, restaurants, transit systems, and tours. My wife and I have been devouring this book in the months before our trip to NYC. It has been a blast. The beginning of the book also includes some nice color photography of various key sights and Fodor's has done readers a great service by listing its 'moments not to miss' on one page (things like where to be for a great sunset or the most romantic restaurant etc.).
Also helpful are numerous itineraries for walking tours based on a 3 day or 5 day trip to NYC. The inside cover includes a checklist of items to cover in the months up to your trip (reservations, finances etc.)
After returning from our trip, my wife and I can say that this book was a MASSIVE help to us. We carried it around in our bag and stopped each day once or twice to review it as we walked around. A great resource.
Wow!Review Date: 2002-04-29
It includes categories such as: The Arts, Lodging, Nightlife, Shopping, and many more. Everything you need to know about the greatest city in the world is in this book!
Perhaps one of my favorite things about this book is that it has up to the date website information. I was able to purchase many of my tickets for attractions in advance thanks to this feature which allowed me to avoid long lines.
Other great features include addresses and telephone numbers, fax numbers, admission prices, and opening hours. Never worry about not having enough $$ or arriving too late to find the attraction closed.
Use this book as your guide and you are guaranteed to have a wonderful visit to NYC!
Comprehensive Guidebook for the NYC TravellerReview Date: 2002-02-05
Amazon.com Readers,
Just a note -- the building on the cover of this book is the Flatiron Building, not the WTC as another reader suggested.
Within the past year, I bought a Fodor's guide to New York City. The guide I bought was the 2001 edition (not too much different from the 2002 edition), because I wanted to see what it said about the famous and not so famous places in New York City. I am a resident of NYC, and I have been for my whole life, which is one reason I wanted to see a travel book, about it. I read about Grand Central Station, the American Museum of Natural History (which I live very close to), and the buildings along Central Park West. One building I would like to see some information about in the Fodor's guides is the El Dorado, further up Central Park West than the Dakota, San Remo and Beresford (three very famous buildings, but not necessarily more worthy of attention than the El Dorado). Most reviewers might think that the El Dorado is too far uptown to be fashionable, but there are some famous people living in that building who may disagree. The building is a fine example of art deco design, and was made a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.
Since I am a resident of this great city, it was very interesting for me to actually buy a travel guide and read it as a tourist would. Fodor's is always very comprehensive with their reviews.
I didn't read the restaurant reviews, but some restaurants that I have liked going to for a while include Merchants NY, on Columbus Avenue between 85th and 86th streets, Neo (a bit pricey, but a great Japanese restaurant) on 84th and Broadway, and Zocalo (a Mexican restaurant) on the Dining Concourse level of Grand Central Station. Write some follow-up reviews of this Fodor's Title and let me know how you like these restaurants! Enjoy your trip to the greatest city on earth!
All the Best,
--Daniel

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Heminway is a GOD !Review Date: 2008-09-19
Please Re-readReview Date: 2006-02-02
Would anyone say that Robert Jordan was having a good time? I think not. Let us also remember that one cannot write, with such vivid detail, that which Hemingway wrote about in FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS without actually having been there himself. He knew then and if we would only know now. Hemingway is not for everyone...besides OLD MAN AND THE SEA.
Hemingway's best novelReview Date: 2007-09-28
For whom The Bell Tolls is probably my favorite novel by Hemingway. It is a story told during the Spanish Civil War of an American, Robert Jordan, who fights as a guerilla who knows how to blow up things, especially trains. It helps if you speak a little Spanish
Hemingway uses it scattered through out the story.
Gunner September, 2007
Hemingway at his bestReview Date: 2006-08-01
It's difficult to point at one work of a writer like Ernest Hemingway and claim it to be the best, but that is the claim that I would make for "For Whom the Bell Tolls."
This is a story that captures both the true spirit and the doubtful minds of war. It portrays both courage and cowardice, in the beautifully descriptive words that Hemingway was known for. His main character Robert Jordan is an American college instructor who leaves his job to take part in the Spanish Revolution, with a strong conviction in his heart and truly believing that he can make a difference. The story encompasses a time frame of slightly less than three days, during which he plots to blow a strategic bridge at precisely the right time. In those three days he falls in love with a young Spanish girl in the encampment where he is awaiting that moment and is involved in a character conflict with one of the guerrilla fighters by the name of Pablo.
This is a well paced story and never boring, with action suspense and romance, all coming together in a setting where you can feel the cold and smell the forest in the way that only Hemingway can describe it. A splendid and beautifully told story that I would recommend to anyone of any age or gender. For that reason I would place "For Whom the Bell Tolls" at the top of the heap among all of his works.
In my opinion this great story is the pinnacle of Hemingway's talent. A must read for anyone interested in great literature.

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Loved it!Review Date: 2008-01-06
GRATITUDE FOR THIS INSPIRING BOOKReview Date: 2006-09-20
WE ALL THOUGHT ABOUT THE NYC SCHOOL CHILDREN THAT DAY. WE ALL WONDERED ABOUT THE TEACHERS WHO WERE IN CHARGE. WE WANTED TO KNOW WHEN AND HOW THEY FOUND OUT, WHAT EACH TEACHER SAID , HOW THEY FELT, WHO THEY CALLED, HOW THEY KEPT THEIR COOL WITH THE CHILDREN.... HOW THEY SHOWED UP AS LEADERS IN THE FACE OF THE GRAVEST TRAGEDY. AND, IN THE AFTERMATH, HOW THEY CAME TO AN INNER PLACE OF HOPE FOR THE FUTURE; HOPE THAT CONTINUES TODAY.
THE STORIES ARE STIRRING. THE VOICES NEED TO BE HEARD. THE READINGS WILL TOUCH YOUR HEART, WILL MOVE YOU TO TEARS, AND WILL LEAVE YOU WITH PROFOUND RESPECT AND ADMIRATION FOR OUR TEACHERS... AND A DEEP SENSE OF GRATITUDE FOR EVERY DAY.
Powerful, hopeful bookReview Date: 2006-09-14
Precious inspiration and guidance for those who care about childrenReview Date: 2006-09-12
None of us can be sure how we would have responded to such a challenge. But the 17 teachers who wrote this book, do. Their very personal memoirs have inspired me as a teacher, and as a grandparent of young children who have already asked: "Can something like that happen again?"
Reading these teachers' well-earned words is like sitting around a kitchen table with a group of smart, dedicated, and exerienced teachers, and hearing them share t heir struggles with the greatest educational challenge of our time: sustaining the hopes of the next generation.
Patricia Lent, a 2nd-3rd grade teacher, reports one of her students saying: "I'll never forget that on that day you held my hand and you didn't let go."
"I couldn't let what had happened destroy what was left that was good," writes Debbie Almontaser.
Voices from the classroom are all too rare in the literature of education and pedagogy. This book is exhilarting to read and an authentic source of hope and help for parents, teachers, and students.
Ronald Gross

BEAUTIFUL CALENDERReview Date: 2006-02-25
Fra Angelico: A Breathtaking GlimpseReview Date: 2006-01-30
Inspirational Immediacy and Presence Review Date: 2008-02-29
Fra Angelico ("the angelic friar"; ca. 1390/95-1455) was one of Renaissance Florence's leading painters. In addition to his celebrated altarpieces and frescos in Florence, Fiesole, Cortona, Perugia, and Rome, Fra Angelico also completed many masterpieces on a small scale. His predella panels, the small narrative scenes included beneath large altarpieces, are among the most innovative creations in fifteenth century Florence, while his images of the Virgin and Child still retain the inspirational immediacy and presence that first secured the artist's reputation as the premier painter of his age.
Research undertaken in the last fifty years now allows scholars to reconstruct a more historically reliable biography of Fra Angelico that goes beyond the legends and traditions to establish his position not only as one of the greatest masters of the fifteenth century, but also as one of the most intellectually accomplished painters who ever lived.
This book is an up-to-date, and comprehensive, look at the sublime works of one of Renaissance Italy's greatest masters.
Fra Angelico: A Reevaluation and AppreciationReview Date: 2005-10-29
Words fail in describing the degree of integrity of scholarship of the contributors. Under the curatorial guidance of Laurence Kanter the museum has gathered seventy-odd paintings, drawings and illuminations from books by Fra Angelico, and then to add to the dimension of the great master's influence, they have added some fifty works by his students and disciples. While Fra Angelico shines in his extraordinary sense of detail and representational art in a period when art was flattened decor and just entering the blossoming of the Renaissance, the works included by his pupils are quite staggeringly beautiful. Some would say comparison to the master is unfair: history offers another vantage, that being the concept that the truly great teachers enlighten their pupils to exceed the teacher's creations!
While the visual components of this fine book are incomparable, the various written sections by not only Laurence Kanter, but also by Pia Palladino, Magnolia Scudieri, Carl Strehlke, Victor M. Schmidt, and Anneke de Vries not only inform - they also read like a novel of the life and times in 15th Century Florence. In every way this is a magnum opus that represents well the Museum's exemplary exhibition of the work of Fra Angelico. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, October 05

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Hession and Pickrel are terrific storytellers Review Date: 2008-06-07
AIArchitect -February 1, 2008
BOOK REVIEW
Frank's Last Stand
Frank Lloyd Wright in New York: The Plaza Years, 1954-1959, by Jane King Hession and Debra Pickrel (Gibbs Smith, 2007)
Reviewed by Garo Gumusyan, AIA
Summary: Frank Lloyd Wright, the suave, romantic playboy, at 85 years old, has one last mission--to seduce that faithless woman of a certain age, New York City. She has been on his list for a long time. This time, though, he will do it his way. Everything is meticulously planned ... down to the Plaza Hotel's Suite # 223, which Wright will completely make over; for Christian Dior's previous "inferior desecration" of the room simply will not do.
The time is the `50s, and New York City, the object of his desires, is getting a major make-over--International Style. And who are the ones busy reshaping the grand corporate headquarters that line Park Avenue? None other than the Mies van der Rohe-clones, for whom Wright has nothing but contempt!
Two avenues west, ensconced in his Plaza suite, Wright, anointed the "greatest architect of all time" by House Beautiful, sits stewing, yearning, waiting, having yet to build a single structure in the burgeoning post-war Capital of the World.
This is the dramatic setting for Jane King Hession and Debra Pickrel's recent survey of Frank Lloyd Wright's time in New York between 1954 and 1959. As their story unfolds, Wright, the aging playboy, has one more trick left up his sleeve, the magnificent Guggenheim Museum, which would indelibly leave his mark on the city he loved to hate.
Hession and Pickrel are terrific storytellers and they know their subject well. Along the way, we discover little gems such as when Marilyn Monroe comes to Suite # 223, without then-husband Arthur Miller, to privately discuss a house they were planning to build together in Connecticut. Wright, sensing his opportunity to be with the starlet alone, asks his secretary to take his own wife out shopping.
Wright wasn't always so smooth for "when he ordered his favorite spirit, Old Bushmills, neat, the waiter usually incorrectly delivered his Irish whiskey in an ice filled glass. Wright would pick up a spoon ... lift the cubes out one by one, and proceed to flip them across the green carpeted floor, to the astonishment and pleasure of the other patrons."
Insightful little stories like these illuminate this late yet significant period in the American master's life. This is a cleverly written book and delicious read. Which raises the question: A half a century has passed since his death, why hasn't there been another Wright? What does this say about the current American Architecture? Makes you reach for that Old Bushmills. Neat.
...the bon vivant starchitect of this Manhattan tale...Review Date: 2008-06-07
Frank Lloyd Wright in New York
by Jane King Hession and Debra Pickrel (Gibbs Smith)
The Frank Lloyd Wright who emerges as the bon vivant starchitect of this Manhattan tale retains the pluck of the upstart Prairie School designer, only with a more obsessive bent. The authors cast the Guggenheim as Wright's foil: the museum-as-ramp that became both the aesthetic driving force of his life and a symbol of his relationship with the city, something welcoming and discomfiting all at once. In near-breathless depictions, Wright's live-in suite at the Plaza Hotel takes form as a veritable Algonquin Round Table in the sky, a whirligig of visiting celebrities, lawyers, scholars, and architects that mirrored the excitement of the museum being erected on the ground below.
Beautiful book, great storyReview Date: 2008-03-02
Well illustrated book about FLW's last yearsReview Date: 2008-03-13
The book is a 160 page quarto printed on glossy paper. It is illustrated with many photos I've never seen before of Wright in his Plaza suite, at the Guggenheim construction site, and at various other places in the New York area. The book uses a vert small font (6 or 8 point?) which makes it hard to read in poor light. I had to set the book aside to read it in a brightly lit room, it was too hard to read by a dim nightstand bulb.
FLW spent money freely even when he didn't have it. In order to supervise work on the Guggenheim he chose a corner suite at the luxurious Plaza Hotel at the corner or Fifth Avenue and Park Avenue South, decorating it according his own tastes. He spent less than a week per month in New York during the years of construction but insisted on living in a grand style while there. The site of the museum itself on Fifth Avenue's Museum Mile was similarly chosen to impress; Guggenheim and Wright earlier rejected a site in Fort Tryon Park near the Cloisters as being too far away from the fashionable parts of Manhattan.
There are fascinating sections that detail FLW's television appearances while in New York; he was interviewed by Mike Wallace, appeared on "What's My Line," and several other shows.
Wright sought other design work while in New York. He designed a luxury Park Avenue car dealership interior as well as a home for that dealership's owner. A home in Staten Island (still in existence) built to his "Usonian" standard is the only Wright private residence in New York City. Wright found that his design ideas were at odds with the glass box office buildings of the International Style that were then in favor.
There is a another interesting section that details several meetings with Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller to plan a dream house for some acreage they owned; the house was never built and their marriage was soon in dire straits.
I have read several books about FLW in recent years and was pleased to find that this book contained information and photographs I hadn't seen elsewhere. This makes this book worthwhile and highly recommended despite its relatively narrow focus.

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Glory in New York; fools gold in San FranciscoReview Date: 2004-01-18
I don't remember why, but for some reason, I decided at the time that I would not actually open up the book and read it until after the Giants won a World Series.
Eleven years and a lifetime of heartbreak later, I realize that the Giants will win a World Series on the day after the Messiah comes riding into Jerusalem on a white donkey, blowing his shofar.
I recently found the book again and realized that I would never get to read it if I actually waited as long as I had originally intended so I just finished it.
One of the reasons why it's an interesting read is because it's written at the dawn of a new age in Giants history - on the heels of the aborted sale and move of the franchise to Tampa Bay, Florida and the subsequent purchase of the contractual services of one Barry Lamar Bonds. So you can probably take almost all of the franchise batting records that are listed at the back of the book and throw them to the wind.
And speaking of the wind, the book also predates by a few years the relocation of home field from Candlestick Park - termed by Bruce Jenkins as "the great wind machine" - to Pacific Bell Park in the heart of downtown San Francisco. Candlestick Park was much maligned as a baseball field in its time, but it looks quite magnificent in the photographs that the authors include in the text. And as they point out, it held up to the 1989 Series earthquake. Fans and reporters who diss Candlestick today are weather wimps and ingrates.
The book is a retrospective of Giants history starting in 1885 from their magnificent beginning as the New York Gothams ("My big fellow! My Giants!", owner Jim Mutrie is supposed to have triumphantly exclaimed, according to legend, after one particularly satisfying victory) to the glory days in the first 30 years of the 20th century under Manager John McGraw, King Carl Hubbell, Bill Terry, and Mel Ott to the lean years of the 1940's when the war depleted their roster to rebirth and redemption in the 1950's - courtesy (in large part) of Leo Durocher, Bobby Thomson, and Willie Mays - even as economic considerations were moving both the Giants and their historical rivals, the Dodgers, inexorably away from New York and toward the West Coast.
The 1950's might have even been more glorious on the field if the Korean War hadn't exacted two years of military obligation from Willie Mays and if Monte Irvin hadn't broken his leg in a pre-season 1952 exhibition game.
The book also captures the empty glory of the Giants San Francisco history - a lot of great teams; a lot of great players; a lot of close calls and nothing left at the end of any season but a collapsed one-horse shay. The authors perfectly summarize the history of the 1960's Giants with the observation, "It may be that no team has ever had so much talent and worked so hard and come away with so little to show for it".
Little did the authors know that, ten years after they wrote those words, they could be recycled to describe the Giants of the 1990's and 2000's. The substantive questions that they ask at the end of the book about the team's future can now be answered, "No."
The book's feature point is its collection of historical photographs, including, for example, a 1914 Cracker Jack card of Christy Mathewson, an art deco photographic cover of the 1933 World Series (Giants-Senators) program, and a 1952 program, on the cover of which Durocher reads to a cherubic Giant player the story of "The Little Miracle of Coogan's Bluff", and much much more. Having this book is the next best thing to owning your own souvenir shop.
As for the writing, it is flawed in some instances and brilliant in others. The description of the end of the 1962 World Series is so agonizingly good that I can't read it again. On the other hand, the authors several times commit the Giant mistake of saying that the team almost moved to Minnesota in 1976. While the relocation of the Giants and Dodgers to Minneapolis and St. Paul had been considered in the 1950's, in 1976, Minnesota was (and still is) barely able to support the Twins, let alone a second major league team. It was Toronto that the Giants almost moved to, having been tentatively sold to LaBatt's Brewery. LaBatt's eventually bought the Blue Jays, who would bring two world championships to the city of Toronto. It makes one think.
And while 1974-1985, as the authors say, was almost entirely a dismal chapter in the team's history, the one exception to that was the scrappy band of overachievers, led by Vida Blue, Jack Clark, Willie McCovey and Mike Ivie that made a serious run at a vastly more talented Dodger team in 1978. If John "The Count" Montefusco (for accuracy's sake, his nickname contained one letter too many) could have replicated his 1975 and 1976 performances in 1978, the team could have pulled it off. Failure to even mention the 1978 team is a glaring omission (there is one 1979 photograph of Jack Clark sliding home).
Failing to mention the 1982 team -- the one that contended into the final week of the season and ultimately took away (thanks largely to Joe Morgan) the satisfaction of playing "spoiler" to the Dodgers -- was also a glaring omission.
And - it's not the authors' fault - but while Will Clark's place in Giant history of the late 1980's must be acknowledged, referring to him as a possible future Hall of Famer now seems laughable in retrospect. And his endorsement of the book on its back cover - "This is a must for all Giants fans, past and present" - turns out to be a bitterly ironical demerit.
Some of Slick Will's more cynical critics now wish that he had taken more of an interest in the Giants during the last season that he played for them.
NOSTALGIA AT IT'S BESTReview Date: 2001-05-28
InquiryReview Date: 2000-03-03
If anybody knows how to contact Bruce Chadwick or David M. Spindel then please forward their contact info. right away. (650.988.9290) or ryan@altoscan.com
WONDERFUL BOOK FOR BASEBALL ENTHUSIASTS!Review Date: 1999-12-18
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Coming of Age in Turbulent TimesReview Date: 2008-04-21
coming of age in WWIIReview Date: 2005-10-01
It's about the rhetoric, the manifesto & working the words of revolution & socialism & is a topnotch, A1, erudite memoir of coming of age during a time most everyone has forgotten -- the politics of Labor in America during WWII.
It's all about outsiders & hell-raisers, passionate prophets & ardent acolytes, & one strong young woman who put her money where her mouth was. GIRL IN MOVEMENT will satisfy & entrance.
Don't be put off that the publishers haven't figured out how to get the cover up on Amazon -- GIRL IN MOVEMENT is an excellent memoir not to be missed, about a fascinating time in the lives of one group of the Greatest Generation.
Girl in Movement: Subtle PowerReview Date: 2001-06-15
Girl In Movement - a Moving MemoirReview Date: 2001-03-02

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The Best "Girl" Book Yet!Review Date: 2001-05-28
Excellent writing! This is the best "Girl" book yet.
A great work for mystery loversReview Date: 2001-04-19
At the hospital, Jane realizes that her dad is mumbling something about his fall being not an accident. She takes a job with Perry Mannerback who once bought a painting that Jane's dad did. When her father finally succumbs under questionable circumstances, Jane concludes that the clock in the portrait Peter bought is the key to her father's death. Though alone and with no sleuthing experience, Jane is determined to learn the truth behind her father's fall and his death.
The latest stand-alone "Girl" novel, THE GIRL IN THE FACE OF THE CLOCK, is simply fantastic. The story line requires an acceptance stretch, but readers will gladly do so as the amateur sleuth invades the impenetrable art world. The characters including the comatose Aaron make the plot work as readers root for Jane to learn what really happened without suffering further harm and also make it with the "Boy" on the plane to London. Charles Mathes fourth "Girl" novel is an interesting tale.
Harriet Klausner
The girl in the face of the clockReview Date: 2001-03-31
Charles Mathes has a magical way with words. He can also discuss serious issues in a deep & concise manner. For example, when Jane's father had a serious fall and went into a coma, Jane had come home from college and 'gone through the horrible process of American medicine in a state of panic and determination, barely able to . . . articulate the decisions that had to be made. Many nights she had just sat by his bedside weeping, overwhelmed by it all'.
Do read this wonderfully witty book!
A reader from Cleveland Heights, OhioReview Date: 2001-04-30

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Excellent BookReview Date: 2007-01-23
Portrait of a Titan of American Modern ArtReview Date: 2006-12-15
There was at the time no American art movement. The few painters of the time had great difficulty selling their work. Edith changed that. Her gallery specialized in the work of these New York locals, combined agressive selling with a devotion to this style that remained for forty four years.
It was largely because of her that there is an American art scene. This book is a fine tribute to her life that has largely been forgotten.
amazing readReview Date: 2008-03-24
It is frankly and beautifully written in a way that puts the reader in the back of the Rolls Royce with Abby Rockefeller and behind the desk with Edith in her Greenwich village gallery.
I am only half way through the book and am savoring it thoroughly for the ride that it is taking me on: I feel like I walked the construction site of Rockefeller Center,toured Radio City Music before the first Rockette,
and participated in persuading Mayor LaGuardia to put a subway stop at Rock Center....
Fascinating and excellent read.
Good Read For Any Small Business Owner. It's Fascinating History As Well!Review Date: 2007-03-22

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Great! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !Review Date: 2000-06-28
Required Reading for us Coney Island FanaticsReview Date: 2004-05-18
Here, Edo McCullough talks honestly about Coney's glories, as well as its seamy underbelly - nothing is left out, and it isn't necessarily a "sentimental journey", after all. But all the better - the seamy side is half the fun, after all. From shifty politics, prostitution, crime and carnies, to the glories of Luna Park, Dreamland, and Steeplechase - the reader is in for a truly fascinating experience.
But be warned - once you pick the book up, you'll have a hard time putting it down. Despite it's being packed with solid history, it's a very quick read - which, I think, is a very good sign. Enjoyable education - who could ask for more?
Five miles of historyReview Date: 2004-04-25
What McCullough makes more than clear is that this five-mile strip of beachfront is as rich in its history as Cape Cod, perhaps moreso. From the early Indian villages to the Dutch settlers to the developers who saw in it a gold mine (once mass transit made the place accessible), Coney Island is a place of a million and one stories and histories. It was a place, as McCullough describes, wherein everything went: recreation, vice, entertainment (high and low), graft and sports. It was The Five Points and Fifth Avenue on a beach. In this sense, it could have only grown in New York because it was so much like it. However, it did offer one thing; fresh seaside air. Funny as it may seem, when the place first became popular, most New Yorkers didn't know how to swim--where could they swim, after all? In the polluted East or Hudson Rivers? By the time the rides and attractions, Dreamland and Luna Park arrived, Coney Island already earned its superelative, surreal reputation for escapism.
What I find interesting is McCullough's choice of the phrase "A Sentimental Journey" in the book's subtitle. Considering the book describes Coney Island warts and all, the sentimentality is often underplayed. And, finally, there is a nice sprinkling of illustrations throughout that helps to bring the now-faded playground of the masses back to life. Everyone will enjoy this book.
Rocco Dormarunno
author of The Five Points
Fact is more amazing than fiction!Review Date: 2001-01-07
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