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Area Code 212: New York Days, New York Nights

by Tama Janowitz

Area Code 212: New York Days, New York Nights Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

"The other day I was walking down the street (again, fully, 100 percent clothed, and when I say 100 percent, that means practically not an inch of exposed skin) and some man on a corner yelled, "You having a bad-hair day! Whoops, I mean you having a bad-hair month! I guess you probably having a bad-hair life!"

- from Area Code 212

Praise for Tama Janowitz

"A writer of considerable talent."

- The New York Observer

"A singular talent"

- The New York Times Book Review

"A true original."

- San Francisco Chronicle

"Funny, reflective . . . wonderfully sharp."

- The Washington Post

"A penetrating eye."

- New York magazine

Review:

"While Janowitz is famous for her 1986 bestseller Slaves of New York, she's published widely since then — in everything from Vogue to Modern Ferret — and has revised many pieces for this anthology. Apart from the first selection, a horrifying description of having a miscarriage in a toilet at the Museum of Modern Art, most are in the E.B. White mode: witty vignettes on life in New York. Since adopting Chinese babies isn't uncommon in the world of modern Manhattanites, it's not surprising when Janowitz describes the trip she and her husband took to Heifei to adopt. Janowitz's description of her incompetence as a new mom has an almost Marx Brothers quality, as she details their baby fighting a diaper change 'like a wounded fox in a leg-hold trap.' Her essays on animals and pets are characteristically contrarian. She prefers 'timid, feeble, neurotic, snappish, picky, babyish' dogs, but finds the Prospect Park Zoo's kangaroo no more interesting than a 'gigantic rabbit.' Apart from crotchety lapdogs, Janowitz loves food (oozing pizza, pounds of chocolate, doughnuts, steaks, etc.), although she doesn't enjoy elegant hors d'oeuvres at lavish receptions — after all, isn't eating 'basically a solitary pleasure'? 'The '80s died in Manhattan in 1987, along with Andy Warhol,' she writes. But Janowitz herself, older and more self-critical, is still going strong. Agent, Betsy Lerner at the Gernert Company. (Dec.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information, Inc.)

Synopsis:

Area Code 212 is filled with idiosyncratic delights and oddities of New York's wittiest social chroniclers, Tama Janowitz. Included in this book is her hilarious account of Andy Warhol's eighties blind date club; her brief moment of celebrity as an elderly teenage extra in a ZZ Top video; the day she tested mentally retarded on an IQ test; and many other revealing tales of New York life, including its parties, its restaurants, and its fashion. Janowitz gives us her unique lowdown on her 1990s conversion from Manhattan to Brooklyn, on hairless dogs and ferrets, babies, the outer boroughs, big hair days, and bad hair days.

About the Author

Tama Janowitz exploded into the literary scene in 1986 with her bestselling sexy book, Slaves of New York. Her most recent novel is Peyton Amberg. Janowitz's work has appeared in many publications, including The New Yorker, Vogue, the New York Times Op-Ed page, and elsewhere. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and daughter.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments xi

"Another Day Almost Over" by Phyllis Janowitz xii

Part One: Family Life 1

Performance Art 3

Looks Good on Paper 8

A New York Marriage 19

Commencement Speech at the Community

College of Beaver County 21

Style 29

White, Single and Female in New York City 34

Mothers 39

And Baby Makes Four 42

The New York Child 49

The New York jungle 50

Willow, Aged Four and a Half 61

A Miracle 62

Eat Your Peas 63

Part Two: Animals 67

Why I'm a Little dog Person 69

A New York Squirrel 74

City Squirrel No. 2 75

The Dog without a Personality 78

The Difference between Dogs and Babies 85

The Catlady 89

Ferrets 92

Obsessed with Ferrets 96

A Trip to the Veterinarian 105

Riverside Park 107

The New York Birdman 109

Queen of the Brooklyn Rodeo 113

f0 Raped by Butterflies 117

A Monarch in Manhattan 120

The Kangaroos at the Zoo 122

Part Three: Breakthroughs in Science and Medicine 125

Harassment 127

Sex, Unable to 130

My Peculiar Affliction 134

Psychological Testing 136

A Visit to Bellevue Hospital 138

Old People 145

Maybe I Am, Maybe Not 147

Part Four: Food 149

Gluttony 151

The Food Chain 154

The Supermarket, Part Two 159

The Dinner Party

f0161

Salad 167

City Water 168

New York Wrestling Restaurant 170

An Evening at the Very Fine Pierre Hotel 178

The Black Hole in the Donut 184

Hors d'Oeuvres 190

Bar and Grill 195

Durian Fruit 201

Tajine 205

Part Five: City Life 211

Why I Love New York 213

A Heck of a Town 215

The City Dweller's Daily Writing Routine 222

I Was an Elderly Teenage Extra in a Video for MTV 224

Art in the Early'80s 229

Andy'85 240

The Story of Publishing as Told by an Author 247

Summer of Excess 249

Big City Makeover 256

Manhattan Manners 263

Some New York Apartments 269

Noise in New York 277

New York Media 280

A New York Bank 283

The Literary Mafia 288

Pearl River 290

Net Worth 293

The Economy of New York 297

Movies 308

Cross town, Cross culture 312

The Same but Not the Same 315

New York City, One More Time 322

Looking Out 332

Andy 335

Something That Still Brings Tears When I Think about It 337

The Subways 339

Assignment from the NY Times Op Ed Page 345

After 9/11 347

About the Author 349

Product Details

ISBN:
9780312320621
Subtitle:
New York Days, New York Nights
Author:
Janowitz, Tama
Publisher:
St. Martin's Griffin
Subject:
Literary
Subject:
Essays
Publication Date:
20051101
Binding:
Electronic book text in proprietary or open standard format
Grade Level:
General/trade
Language:
English
Pages:
368
Dimensions:
9 x 5.46 x 1.18 in 1.15 lb

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Area Code 212: New York Days, New York Nights Used Hardcover
0 stars - 0 reviews
$1.50 In Stock
Product details 368 pages St. Martin's Press - English 9780312320621 Reviews:
"Publishers Weekly Review" by , "While Janowitz is famous for her 1986 bestseller Slaves of New York, she's published widely since then — in everything from Vogue to Modern Ferret — and has revised many pieces for this anthology. Apart from the first selection, a horrifying description of having a miscarriage in a toilet at the Museum of Modern Art, most are in the E.B. White mode: witty vignettes on life in New York. Since adopting Chinese babies isn't uncommon in the world of modern Manhattanites, it's not surprising when Janowitz describes the trip she and her husband took to Heifei to adopt. Janowitz's description of her incompetence as a new mom has an almost Marx Brothers quality, as she details their baby fighting a diaper change 'like a wounded fox in a leg-hold trap.' Her essays on animals and pets are characteristically contrarian. She prefers 'timid, feeble, neurotic, snappish, picky, babyish' dogs, but finds the Prospect Park Zoo's kangaroo no more interesting than a 'gigantic rabbit.' Apart from crotchety lapdogs, Janowitz loves food (oozing pizza, pounds of chocolate, doughnuts, steaks, etc.), although she doesn't enjoy elegant hors d'oeuvres at lavish receptions — after all, isn't eating 'basically a solitary pleasure'? 'The '80s died in Manhattan in 1987, along with Andy Warhol,' she writes. But Janowitz herself, older and more self-critical, is still going strong. Agent, Betsy Lerner at the Gernert Company. (Dec.)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information, Inc.)
"Synopsis" by ,
Area Code 212 is filled with idiosyncratic delights and oddities of New York's wittiest social chroniclers, Tama Janowitz. Included in this book is her hilarious account of Andy Warhol's eighties blind date club; her brief moment of celebrity as an elderly teenage extra in a ZZ Top video; the day she tested mentally retarded on an IQ test; and many other revealing tales of New York life, including its parties, its restaurants, and its fashion. Janowitz gives us her unique lowdown on her 1990s conversion from Manhattan to Brooklyn, on hairless dogs and ferrets, babies, the outer boroughs, big hair days, and bad hair days.

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