New York Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

New York Book

Christopher Darlington Morley (1890-1957) was, for countless readers, the American man of letters of his generation. Whether they appeared as newspaper and magazine columns, literary essays, novels, or plays, his writings were eagerly awaited and read. Born in Haverford, Pennsylvania, and raised in Baltimore, he was educated at Haverford College and then, as a Rhoades Scholar, at Oxford. But he spent virtually all the remaining years of his life in the journalistic and literary milieux of New York, with a brief stint as a journalist in Philadelphia. Given his predilection for living in New York, then, it is not surprising that Morley devoted much of his writing to recording life in the city as he observed it daily. But what is surprising is that a book comprising exclusively these writings has heretofore been unavailable. Christopher Morley?s New York will be welcomed, therefore, by anyone who has ever wished for such a book or, for that matter, by anyone who would like to experience the New York of a bygone era at the hands of a truly great American writer. A collection of fifty-five essays, written mostly in the mid-twenties but with some later examples as well, Christopher Morley?s New York presents in rich, evocative detail New York at the end of World War I ? that heady time after the doughboys returned, the Twenties got roaring, the Volstead Act found itself thwarted, and a lot of progressive life got on with its business before running into the wall of the Great Depression. In the first section of the book, East Side, West Side, All Around the Town, we experience New York just as Morley did: through its bookstores, restaurants, taverns, waterfronts, and other locales that lent the city its unique, rough-and-tumble character. But we?re also treated to a vivid picture of Christopher Morley himself, particularly in the next section, The Three Hours for Lunch Club, in which Morley?s gusto in food, drink, companionship, conversation, and general bonhomie is plainly evident. Finally, in the last section, we experience another, suburban New York: Roslyn, Long Island, where for years Morley lived with his wife and family. Contrasted with the vulgar beauty of the city, the natural splendor Morley encountered on Long Island is particularly affecting. This attractive volume is enhanced by the evocative period illustrations of Walter Jack Duncan, who illustrated so many Morley first editions.Read More

from£43.64 | RRP: £32.50
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  • 0823212149
  • 9780823212149
  • Christopher Morley, Walter Jack Duncan
  • 28 February 1989
  • Fordham University Press
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 379
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