Here is New York
K**N
The indestructible spirit of the world's greatest city
E.B. White, the author of the classic THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE, shows off that style brilliantly in this highly literate, amusing, and passionate memoir of New York City in 1948. Although the surface details of New York have changed in sixty years, the spirit remains the same, and that's what White is really writing about. White is also disturbingly prophetic when he writes, "The subtlest change in New York is something people don't speak much about but that is in everyone's mind. The city, for the first time in its long history, is destructible. A single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions." I doubt that a book such as this could be written today. Some editor would "dumb it down" and politically correct it. But how refreshing it is to read such wonderful prose. This is really a 56-page essay between hard covers, rather than a "book." As such, it's a very easy and exhilarating reading experience and would make a wonderful gift for anyone who loves New York or would like to visit it someday. Five stars, absolutely.
W**K
A fascinating look at the greatest city
E.B. White was a very accomplished writer. His books and essays are some the best literature we have. His short book "Here Is New York" provides a good example of his gift as a generator of beautiful prose. He wrote this piece in 1948 and as the writer of the introduction, Roger Angell states White confronts the task with the knowledge that what he writes at his time will not endure because the city is ever changing metropolis. White likes to write with a heavy use of metaphor and he constantly anthropomorphizing what the city of New York has to offer us. He speaks of three basic types of individuals who spend their day in the city: the commuter who never really gets to know the city, the native individual who takes the city for granted and the ones who move in later in life who are in love with the city and enthralled with it's bill of fare. I enjoyed the book. It was fascinating to hear him speak of the boroughs that have evolved with the city. If he were to write the essay today I think he would be dismayed by the further disappearance of the places that he cherished and yet he would continue to express the belief that it is the greatest city in the world.
D**N
White wraps his master level talent around a wide-eyed Manhattan love story.
A classic from the 1940's, "Here is New York," is well thought and well penned. What was fundamentally true about New York City yesterday, is still true today and will likely be true again in 2040 when this little novella turns 100. Since any town is really a reflection of it's people, White describes NY as three towns made up of three distinct groups. The first elite circle is the establishment, it includes those select families that keep guard of the famous (and infamous) institutions of New York City. The second set represent the public hordes of daily commuters, without this faceless, massive mobile workforce the city would screech to a halt. Finally, White describes the magical third group, right-off-the-boat immigrants both domestic and foreign. Men and women arriving with nothing more then their robust hearts and minds. White romantically and justifiably concludes that without this third injection of new blood, new ideas, and new dreams, New York City would never be as colorful and successful as it is. He wraps up his charming tale by dicing New York City up from another angle. He describes the 100's of small micro towns within a town. Each 2 block set is truly a self contained neighborhood as distinct and self contained as the smallest country hamlet. I live in Roscoe Village within downtown Chicago and this rings so true to me. EB White's nostalgic classic short should be treasured for it's turn of phrase and it's timeless turn.
A**H
Great piece, but is found in Essays too
A nice period essay which, as a gift, pleased my brother-in-law. As others note, it's just one essay that is also complete within the collection The Essays of E.B. White. Small hardback.As long as the buyer knows that the collected essays are in one volume, cheaper. His pieces are either "timeless" (great ones about a range of observations, weather, farming, and delightful ones about animals) or amazingly apt when applied to today's politics.
F**G
Good.
Love reading this book.
B**N
Style, Truth, Prescience
Early to a party, I was looking at a friend's bookcase and pulled this slim volume from a shelf. After reading the first sentence, I knew I had to have it.Originally published in 1949, E.B. White, who no longer lived in New York City, captured the soul and spirit of the place. Nothing has changed. At the time, the United Nations building was under construction, and the bombing of London was fresh in his mind. He ends the book with a vision that perfectly balances hope with danger, in words prescient of September 11 - I re-read those paragraphs on every anniversary, it has become my ritual.But what originally drew me to the book is not only the truth and insight of White, but his style, his felicity of expression. The author of "The Elements of Style" certainly knew the rules, and knew when to break them, as well. The second paragraph ends with a run-on sentence 198 words long, a thrilling joy ride which itself demonstrates how impossible it is to capture, in prose, the enormity and importance of this city.I agree with Russell Baker, this is "the finest portrait ever painted of the city."
L**N
Homily to a Lost New York
E. B. White at his best. The late writing of E. B. White when he had to be coaxed back to Manhattan to write it. As one contemporary author observed, this should really be renamed "This Was New York," but no one can write a universal about New York so we'll leave it as it is. Short and very sweet.
N**A
good account of NYC life
well written.good account of NYC life.Seemsa bit overrated.
T**L
So much impact in so few words- genius!
Absolutely charming and still relevant today. What makes New York City captivating is the history and people rolled into the contradiction of grit and enchantment.
M**R
New York
Ein sehr interessantes Buch über Leben in New York, wie der Einheimische es empfindet, genauso wie der Tourist. Ist empfehlenswert.
C**E
Great wee read, Amazing it was wrote so long ago.
A short homily to New York it puts into words all that you can imagine New York to be. I cant wait to visit and see for myself although I hope I don't end up as one of the tourists he speaks of in the book. If you have been there you'll love it, its unbiased, if you have not you'll love it, its full of hopes and dreams.
S**N
The shortest book in the world.
10 dollars for a 45 minute read. No books that good.
J**Y
Beautifully written will follow up on others by this author.
Please see above nothing to add
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