Hidden
New York
Price: $22.95
Subtitle: A Guide to Places That Matter
Author: Marci Reaven and Steve Zeitlin
Subject: Regional/Travel
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3890-4
Pages: 384 pp. 101 illustrations
Rivergate BooksTM
Praise for Hidden New York
"A wondrous, delightful, lyrical and lovingly rendered
tribute to the soul of New York City. Hidden New York is a
landmark work-the most important NYC travel book since the WPA Guide to
NY. This is a priceless work-I absolutely love this book."-Dave Isay,
radio producer and founder of StoryCorps
"What an extraordinarily intimate love song to a city and to
the indelible places and experiences that make it resonant, and
meaningful and heart-stoppingly real."-Ric Burns, Filmmaker
"If you're ready to venture off the trampled tourist path of
statues, skyscrapers, malls and museums, this book's for you.
Beautifully written, scrumptiously illustrated, impeccably researched,
it's a guide to some of New York's quirkier places, each drenched in
meaning, together offering insight into the city's soul."-Mike Wallace,
coauthor of the Pulitzer-Prize winning Gotham: A History of New York
City to 1898
Description:
Despite its innumerable tourist attractions, New York City
still has many secrets, hidden in the most unlikely places. There is
the Edison Hotel in Times Square, where magicians gather 'round the
Magic Table to socialize and compete. There is Hua Mei Garden in the
Lower East Side, where elderly Chinese men meet to display exotic
birds. And there is Sahadi's in Brooklyn, where the culinary arts
thrive, and New Yorkers go for just the right ingredients for a Middle
Eastern meal. This book details thirty-two unusual locations such as
these and enhances them by including a cluster of additional, related
spots. Hidden New York shows you why these places matter and guides you
through the historical and cultural significance of each one.
Many of them matter because of the opportunities they provide
for socializing, such as the Empire Roller Disco in Brooklyn that
attracts a community of skaters and the Cube sculpture on Astor Place,
which is a meeting spot for homeless youth. Others matter because they
are focal points for communities and the spaces are intertwined with
how people share in each others' lives. Still others have been lost,
like the house under the roller coaster in Coney Island, made famous by
Woody Allen in Annie Hall.
This book is not just about Manhattan, but covers all five
boroughs in New York City. It is an invitation to visit, revisit,
learn, and enjoy all that you didn't know the city has to offer. It
will show you what's there, what used to be there, and why it will be
there for years to come. The chapters, illustrated with appealing
black-and-white photos, include first-person remembrances and
commentaries from New Yorkers themselves. Each entry functions as a
small travel essay, evoking how certain destinations are experienced.
As a guide to the New York City that is less traveled, this unique book
shows that some of the best places to visit are ones that you never
even thought existed.
The 32 Places That Matter
Hua Mei Bird Garden
Russian and Turkish Tenth Street Baths
Bohemian Hall and Beer Garden
The Magic Table at the Edison Hotel
The General Society of Mechanics and Tradesman
Webster Hall
The Cube
Stickball Boulevard and the Stadiums of the Street
Thomas Jefferson Park Pool
Empire Roller Skating Center
Chess Havens
Coney Island
The Lemon Ice King of Corona
Coney Island Bialys and Bagels
Sahadi's Specialty and Middle Eastern Foods
Arthur Avenue Market
Union Square Greenmarket
The Village Vanguard
Casa Amadeo Record Shop
Richmond Barth's Frieze at Kingsborough Houses
Quirky Features of the Landscape
Art in the Subways
Governors Island
Casita Rincn Criollo, Magnolia Tree Earth Center, Liz Christy
Bowery-Houston Community Garden
The Flower District
Fishing around New York
Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue and Museum
Masjid Al-Taqwa
Ganesha Hindu Temple
Our Lady of Mount Carmel Grotto
The Memorials of the Battery
Strawberry Fields
About the Author:
Marci Reaven is the managing director of City Lore,
an organization dedicated to the preservation of the living cultural
heritage of New York City and America. Within City Lore she heads up
Place Matters, a public history and historic preservation initiative to
advocate for the city's places of historical and cultural significance.
Steve Zeitlin is the director and
cofounder of City Lore. He received his Ph.D. in folklore from the
University of Pennsylvania. Prior to arriving in New York, Steve served
for eight years as a folklorist at the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C.
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Price: $22.95
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