Partager
Fr. 40.50
Melanie Benjamin
The Swans of Fifth Avenue
Anglais · Livre Relié
Paraît le 26.01.2016
Description
Zusatztext 53888297 Informationen zum Autor Melanie Benjamin is the New York Times bestselling author of The Aviator’s Wife! The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb! and Alice I Have Been . Benjamin lives in Chicago! where she is at work on her next historical novel. chapter 1 ..... Once upon a time— It was the best of times, it was the worst of times— There once was a man from Nantucket— Truman giggled. He covered his mouth like a little boy, and tittered until his slender shoulders shook, his blue eyes so gleefully mischievous that he looked like a statue of Pan come to life. “Oh, Big Mama! I am such a naughty imp!” “True Heart, you are priceless!” Slim had laughed, too, she remembered, laughed until her ribs ached. Truman did that to her in those glorious early days; he made her laugh. That was it, really. The simple truth of the matter. When he was young, back in 1955, when they were all young—or, at least, younger—when fame was new and friendships fledgling, fueled by champagne and caviar and gifts from Tiffany’s, Truman Capote was a hell of a lot of fun to be around. “Once upon a time,” Slim had finally pronounced. “Yes. Well .?.?.?,” and Truman drawled it out in his theatrical way, adding several syllables. “Once upon a time, there was New York.” New York. Stuyvesants and Vanderbilts and Roosevelts and staid, respectable Washington Square. Trinity Church. Mrs. Astor’s famous ballroom, the Four Hundred, snobby Ward McAllister, that traitor Edith Wharton, Delmonico’s. Zany Zelda and Scott in the Plaza fountain, the Algonquin Round Table, Dottie Parker and her razor tongue and pen, the Follies. Cholly Knickerbocker, 21, Lucky Strike dances at the Stork, El Morocco. The incomparable Hildegarde playing the Persian Room at the Plaza, Cary Grant kneeling at her feet in awe. Fifth Avenue: Henri Bendel, Bergdorf’s, Tiffany’s. There was a subterranean New York, as well; “lower” in every meaning of the word. Ellis Island and the Bowery and the Lower East Side. The subway. Automats and Schrafft’s, hot dogs from a cart, pizza by the slice. Chickens hanging from windows in Chinatown, pickles from a barrel on Delancey. Beatniks in the Village with their torn stockings and dirty turtlenecks and disdain for everything. But that wasn’t the New York that drew the climbers, the dreamers, the hungry. No, it was lofty New York, the city of penthouses and apartments in the St. Regis or the Plaza or the Waldorf, the New York for whom “Take the ‘A’ Train” was a song, not an option. The New York of big yellow taxis in a pinch, if the limousine was otherwise occupied. The New York of glittering opening nights at the Met; endless charity balls and banquets; wide, clean sidewalks uncluttered by pushcarts and clothing racks and children playing. Views of the park, the river, the bridge, not sooty brick walls or narrow, dank alleys. The New York of the plays, the movies, the books; the New York of The New Yorker and Vanity Fair and Vogue. It was a beacon, a spire, a beacon on top of a spire. A light, always glowing from afar, visible even from the cornfields of Iowa, the foothills of the Dakotas, the deserts of California. The swamps of Louisiana. Beckoning, always beckoning. Summoning the discontented, seducing the dreamers. Those whose blood ran too hot, and too quickly, causing them to look about at their placid families, their staid neighbors, the graves of their slumbering ancestors and say— I’m different. I’m special. I’m more. They all came to New York. Nancy Gross—nicknamed “Slim” by her friend the actor William Powell—from California. Gloria Guinness—“La Guinness”—born a peasant in a rural village in Mexico. Barbara Cushing—known as “Babe” from the day she was born, the youngest of three fabulous sisters from Boston. And Truman. Truman Streckfus Person...
Détails du produit
| Auteurs | Melanie Benjamin |
| Edition | Random House USA |
| Langues | Anglais |
| Format d'édition | Livre Relié |
| Sortie | 26.01.2016, retardé |
| EAN | 9780345528698 |
| ISBN | 978-0-345-52869-8 |
| Catégorie |
Littérature
> Littérature (récits)
|
Commentaires des clients
Aucune analyse n'a été rédigée sur cet article pour le moment. Sois le premier à donner ton avis et aide les autres utilisateurs à prendre leur décision d'achat.
Écris un commentaire
Super ou nul ? Donne ton propre avis.