Description: Title: About New York Sketches of the City Author: Francis X. Clines Publisher: McGraw Hill (1979) Description:Phenomenal book. The About New York column was started by Meyer Berger. It was continued by McCandlish Phillips and later Francis X. Clines. Others such as Dan Barry, David Gonzales and Jim Dwyer continued this tradition of storytelling with the column running into the 2020s. Francis X. Clines who worked 59 years for the New York Times compiles the best of his About New York column into book form. Stories about people and places that make great reading. A scarce book not usually found in nice condition like this copy is. From the flap:The Big Apple, Gotham, Sodom on the Hudson—anyone who knows and loves New York is likely to tire of the hyped-up images of the city retailed by its politicians, chamber-of-commerce boosters, and numberless critics. Francis X. Clines, who for three years was The New York Times’ roving observer and recorder of city life, goes beyond the sensational and the lurid to capture a clearer and more convincing sense of the city in the pieces collected here. Whether he is interviewing a cop or a crook, a high school student or a retired schoolteacher, Clines brings to his reports a novelist's ear for voice and eye for detail. Taken together, the eighty-five sketches in About New York—which were originally published in theTimes—give a vivid, humorous, and touching portrait of the place and its people. The PrefaceFor three years, The New York Times had me roam its richest story—the city itself - and file reports three times a week on whatever I pleased. Sometimes I would drop in on the Mayor, or a tunnel cop. I would hang around with a blind beggar for a while or go to the race track with a rich landlord, or spend a night watching prostitutes or just listening to the sounds after closing time at the Bronx ZOO. The editors who had me do this, Abe Rosenthal and Syd Schanberg, set no limits because they wanted the story of the quality of the city that defies the usual categories of journalism. This is the story of the city’s ordinary people, how they come to live and die in the city and make peace with it or not. More than any other beat, this is a story of time and place. It is a narrative story more than an analytical one. It would be enough, I thought, to aim for a point years hence and simply try to describe what life looked like and felt like for this instant, to document the obvious truth that each human being is precious in his or her slot of time. While much of the newspaper necessarily watched the headline events, I had the smaller story of plain individuals, the story that, as the photographer August Sander has explained, gets at a larger truth: ‘‘The individual does not make the history of his time; he both impresses himself on it and expresses its meaning.’’ Such a job would be a privilege anywhere, but in New York it was grand fun and frightening opportunity: watching peerless individuals and staring at facets of a gem. There was no method to this job. I have certain prejudices that were indulged. Having been born in Brooklyn of a woman born in Hell’s Kitchen I have an outer-borough curiosity, and a suspicion that the affluent and the privileged have entrée enough to the daily prints. Then again, the finest people turned up on West 72nd Street in Manhattan as fatefully as on 81st Street in Bay Ridge, and the memories of certain blocks and buildings and individuals can never be fully recounted. The city is such a sight that it strikes deep into a witness and summons up all sorts of storytelling ways. For me these ways go back to places like Noone’s Tavern in Bay Ridge thirty years ago when I was a silent youngster trailing my father, on Saturdays, privileged to listen and watch ordinary people searching for a smile in life. These storytelling ways plagiarize the gifts of countless others, particularly the wit and cynicism of newspaper people like Jerry Allan at the Buffalo Evening News and Sheldon Binn at the Times. And these ways are rooted in the splendid love of words and life displayed by the truest New Yorkers such as Bill Farrell at the Times. I have a new assignment now—new people in a different place—but New York will never be done with me. It will outlive all the people I love and all the stories I loved to tell, and it will survive as a memorial to us all, to all the ordinary people at its heart. Washington, D.C. F.X.C.June 1980 Condition:Book is fine with almost no wear. No writing in book. See all photos. Dustjacket very good plus with slight fading to covers on and near spine. Now covered in a protective sleeve. Dust jacket is priceclipped Details:hardcover 316 pages approx. 6 1/2" x 9"First edition 1980McGraw Hill Terms (payment, shipping, tax, returns, feedback, etc.) Please read before buying U.S. bidders only Payment Please pay within 48 hours of winning. eBay managed payments Shipping Shipping will be $7.25 and will be shipped USPS media mail with tracking. We may upgrade your package at our discretion to USPS Ground Advantage. Package will be shipped within 4 business days after payment - usually faster. The USPS can be notoriously slow, it could take 2-3 weeks for delivery. Please take that into account when leaving feedback, that we will ship quickly, but the USPS can take a long time to deliver, and we have no control over delivery time. 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Price: 27 USD
Location: New York, New York
End Time: 2024-11-08T00:02:01.000Z
Shipping Cost: 7.25 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Book Title: About New York Sketches Of The City
Ex Libris: No
Book Series: n/a
Narrative Type: Nonfiction
Original Language: English
Publisher: McGraw Hill
Inscribed: No
Intended Audience: Adults
Edition: First Edition
Vintage: No
Personalize: No
Publication Year: 1980
Type: History
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Author: Francis X Clines
Features: Dust Jacket
Genre: History, Short Stories
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Topic: New York, Journalism, Columnists