Skip to product information
1 of 1

Habitats

Publisher:

Regular price $22.95
Regular price $22.95 Sale price $22.95
Sold out
There may be eight million stories in the Naked City, but there are also nearly three million dwelling places, ranging from Park Avenue palaces to Dickensian garrets and encompassing much in bet...
Read More
  • 25 March 2013
View Product Details

There may be eight million stories in the Naked City, but there are also nearly three million dwelling places, ranging from Park Avenue palaces to Dickensian garrets and encompassing much in between. The doorways to these residences are tantalizing portals opening onto largely invisible lives. Habitats offers 40 vivid and intimate stories about how New Yorkers really live in their brownstones, their apartments, their mansions, their lofts, and as a whole presents a rich, multi-textured portrait of what it means to make a home in the world’s most varied and powerful city.

These essays, expanded versions of a selection of the Habitats column published in the Real Estate section of The New York Times, take readers to both familiar and remote sections of the city—to history-rich townhouses, to low-income housing projects, to out-of-the-way places far from the beaten track, to every corner of the five boroughs—and introduce them to a wide variety of families and individuals who call New York home. These pieces reveal a great deal about the city’s past and its rich store of historic dwellings. Along with exploring the deep and even mystical connections people feel to the place where they live, these pieces, taken as a whole, offer a mosaic of domestic life in one of the world’s most fascinating cities and a vivid portrait of the true meaning of home in the 21st-century metropolis.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $22.95
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: NYU Press
Publication Date: 25 March 2013
ISBN: 9780814771563
Format: eBook
BISACs: TRAVEL / United States / Northeast / Middle Atlantic (NJ, NY, PA)
REVIEWS Icon
Rosenblum is a fine storyteller, and it is this eye towards telling a good story that is one of the great strengths of this collection. The primary downside to this collection, is, in fact, a plus: the short exposes often leave the reader wanting more, and after a few pages of hooking the reader, suddenly the fascinating story ends, and the interesting characters and their beautiful homes are gone. If you like to peek into residential windows when walking down the streets of New York City and imagine the lives of the habitants, then Habitats will give you a satisfying look into how urban dwellings, and urban dwellers, come to be.