Monday, January 28, 2008

NOT OUR KIND, MUFFY

From a review of a novel set in Manhattan in this week's New York Times Book Review:

There are eight million stories in the naked city, but, in the realm of fiction, they all tend in one of two directions. There are Gotham novels -- billowing and romantic, built to chronicle luminous dreams and the deferment thereof. Then there are what we might call crosswalk novels. Slathered with local color -- shaped by it, for that matter -- these books nurse obsessions with the daily business of taxis and delis and how much to tip the coat-check girl. "The House of Mirth" is vintage Gotham. "Bright Lights, Big City" is narcotic Gotham. The epitome of crosswalk must be Calvin Trillin’s "Tepper Isn't Going Out," a novel about alternate-side parking.

Really? Those are the only two kinds of novels about the city of New York?

Er, what about Invisible Man? Or Call It Sleep?

Whoops -- sorry. Those and similar novels are about a New York that includes poor and ethnically marginalized people. That New York clearly doesn't exist for this reviewer, or at least novels about that New York don't exist for him.

No comments:

Post a Comment