The intimate city Walking New York

Michael Kimmelman

Book - 2022

"A cultural, architectural, and historical guide to twenty walks around and through New York, led by the NYT chief architecture critic during the height of COVID-19. As New York came to a standstill in March of 2020, Michael Kimmelman composed an email to a group of architects, historians, writers, engineers, and city planners, and invited them to take him on a walk. As the chief architecture critic for the New York Times, he was no stranger to the city. But during a time of uncertainty and confusion-where being outside seemed safer than staying inside-he hoped that these strolls around town, led by a group of people who could offer innovative ways of thinking about the city, might function as a public good. They would provide distract...ion, consolation, and joy, not only for himself, but for his readers. This series, which began with a walk down 42nd Street amidst the darkened theaters of Broadway, quickly took on much larger meaning, at a moment when the news and social media were conjecturing about the death of cities. The walks and the accompanying interviews between Michael and his guides together became not only a testament to the city, but a declaration of New York City's resiliency. Interspersed with over one hundred stunning photographs, all taken while the city was shut down, THE WALKS bears witness to the city's unyielding beauty and inspiration, even in the midst of great trauma. Each route is thoughtfully conveyed for the native New Yorker and visitor alike, guided not only by avenues but the windowed facades of skyscrapers, cornices of townhomes, and the public art to be found throughout the city. Honoring the Mannahatta of the past, when rivers, flora, and fauna covered the island, and through the engineering breakthroughs, design trends, economic booms and busts, waves of immigration, and the weathering of time, here is both a thoughtful and kaleidoscopic portrait of New York City itself, and a promise-to the millions who call it home-that it will endure"--

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Subjects
Genres
Guidebooks
Published
New York : Penguin Press 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Michael Kimmelman (author)
Physical Description
xvi, 252 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593298411
  • Introduction
  • Mannahatta
  • Jackson Heights
  • Forest Hills
  • East River
  • Brooklyn
  • East Village
  • Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center
  • Rockefeller Center
  • Harlem
  • Greenwich Village
  • The Skyscrapers of Midtown, Part One
  • The Skyscrapers of Midtown, Part Two
  • 42nd Street
  • Mott Haven and the South Bronx
  • Broadway
  • Museum Mile
  • The Brooklyn Bridge
  • The Financial District
  • Chinatown
  • Mentipathe
  • Acknowledgments
  • Photography Information
  • Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

New York City comes alive in this scintillating collection of conversations between New York Times architecture critic Kimmelman (The Accidental Masterpiece) and architects, historians, artists, and others as they go on walking tours of 19 neighborhoods. The author and his interlocutors stroll through the bustling immigrant communities of Jackson Heights, Queens; visit the Stonewall Bar and other gay landmarks in Greenwich Village; imagine the ancient forests and streams of the pre-European "ecological wonderland" that was once the Bronx; coo over Broadway theaters; crane their necks at Midtown skyscrapers; and peer down at the brickwork of an Upper East Side street. Illustrated with vibrant color photos, Kimmelman's loose-jointed text and dialogues oscillate between beguiling lore--Sands Street "used to be a dense, vibrant, diverse street teeming with sailors... packed with stores, barber shops, cafés, bars, restaurants, gambling dens, tattoo parlors, and brothels"--and piquant evocations of the New Yorkish soul ("I would join my father to check in on his surgical patients at his hospital on 14th Street before he and I meandered slowly back through the Village streets, Dad musing on his days traveling with the Freedom Riders, dreams for a communist future, and whether the Times was run by the CIA"). The result is an enchanting and lyrical montage of an ever-evolving city. (Nov.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

In 20 unnumbered chapters, New York Times architecture critic Kimmelman (Portraits: Talking with Artists at the Met, the Modern, the Louvre and Elsewhere) extols the pleasures of walking and records exchanges in four of New York City's five boroughs (Staten Island is discussed only from a distance) with a constellation of urban specialists. The author pairs himself with experts for geological, topographical, and architectural explorations from Lower Manhattan's Whitehall Terminal to the Bronx. Motivated by the isolating effect of COVID and inspired by Myra Hess's consoling outdoor piano concerts during the air raids of World War II, Kimmelman characterizes his book as a collective diary, a mental atlas, and the work of an urban epicure (the flâneur). Complementary to Michael Sorkin's Twenty Minutes in Manhattan but less exclusively architectural in focus, the book's chapters each begin with a short history of the neighborhood and an introduction to Kimmelman's cicerone, or tour guide. VERDICT With interviews often meandering into the overly personal and with incidental-seeming uncaptioned photographs (their compelling views and dramatic cropping notwithstanding), this book would be more rewarding as a series of video tours.--Paul Glassman

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Twenty tours through New York City reveal a rich tapestry of architecture, urban living, and civic resilience. New York Times architecture critic Kimmelman originally published 17 of these 20 essays in the Times between March and December 2020. "The walks would become my own way of coping with those first months of the pandemic," he writes at the beginning of this lively book, which includes excellent photos. His tours around the city were led by architects, historians, and preservationists. Many were conducted virtually, but all can be strolled in person, book in hand. We get street-level views of the culturally diverse neighborhoods of Jackson Heights and Forest Hills; "America's first commuter suburb," Brooklyn Heights; and "the fountainhead of American bohemia," Greenwich Village. Kimmelman also devotes tours to specific streets (42nd Street) and buildings (Rockefeller Center, "New York's Depression-era version of the pyramids…the largest private construction project in America between the World Wars"). Throughout, the author and his guides never lose sight of the people who live and work in these communities. Fascinating historical facts abound. In each one of New York's Chinatowns, for example, there is a park where the elderly can go for "fresh air and 'san san bu,' leisurely walks." The East Village still shows signs of the Yiddish Theatre District of the early 20th century. The National Registry listing for the Stonewall Inn, site of a famous gay uprising, was achieved using criteria drawn for Civil War battlefields. In Harlem, architect David Adjaye demonstrates how to read the district's layers of history, architecturally: "If we walk north, through Marcus Garvey Park, along 127th Street, you'll see what I mean--houses from the 1850s to the early 1920s, which go from Romantic Classicism to Art Deco, brownstone to stucco." Adjaye's words about Harlem apply to this entire book: "Architecture is about more than shelter, after all. It's about doing something that gives people dignity, hope, a belief in the future." An important book for readers interested in understanding New York through its architecture. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.