THE NEW YORK OBSERVER: ONE OF THE TOP 10 BOOKS FOR FALL
It's no wonder that New York has always been a magnet city for writers.
Manhattan is one of the most walkable cities in the world. While many
novelists, poets, and essayists have enjoyed long walks in New York, not
all of them have had favorable impressions. Addressing an endlessly
appealing subject, Walking New York is a study of twelve American
writers and several British writers who walked the streets of New York
and wrote about their impressions of the city in fiction, nonfiction,
and poetry.
Seen through the eyes of Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, William Dean
Howells, Jacob Riis, Henry James, Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser, James
Weldon Johnson, Alfred Kazin, Elizabeth Hardwick, Colson Whitehead, and
Teju Cole, almost all the works in Walking New York are about Manhattan,
with only Whitman and Kazin writing about Brooklyn. Though the writers
were often irritated, disturbed, and occasionally shocked by what they
saw on their walks, they were still fascinated by the city William Dean
Howells called "splendidly and sordidly commercial" and Cynthia Ozick
called "faithfully inconstant, magnetic, man-made, unnatural--the
synthetic sublime."
In this idiosyncratic guidebook to New York, celebrated writers ruminate
on questions that are still hotly debated to this day: the pros and cons
of capitalism and the impact of immigration. Many imply that New York is
a bewildering text that is hard to make sense of. Returning to New York
after an absence of two decades, Henry James loathed many things about
"bristling" New York, while native New Yorker Walt Whitman both
celebrated and criticized "Mannahatta" in his writings.
Combining literary scholarship with urban studies, Walking New York
reveals how this crowded, dirty, noisy, and sometimes ugly city gave
these "restless analysts" plenty of fodder for their craft.