Winner of the David J. Langum, Sr., Prize in American Historical
Fiction
Named one of the best books of the year by The Washington Post and
"Required Reading" by the New York Post
Edward Rutherfurd celebrates America's greatest city in a rich,
engrossing saga, weaving together tales of families rich and poor,
native-born and immigrant--a cast of fictional and true characters whose
fates rise and fall and rise again with the city's fortunes. From this
intimate perspective we see New York's humble beginnings as a tiny
Indian fishing village, the arrival of Dutch and British merchants, the
Revolutionary War, the emergence of the city as a great trading and
financial center, the convulsions of the Civil War, the excesses of the
Gilded Age, the explosion of immigration in the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries, the trials of World War II, the near demise
of New York in the 1970s and its roaring rebirth in the 1990s, and the
attack on the World Trade Center. A stirring mix of battle, romance,
family struggles, and personal triumphs, New York: The Novel
gloriously captures the search for freedom and opportunity at the heart
of our nation's history.