Lifestyle

The Rise of New York’s Super-Tall Luxury Buildings

Books & the Arts
WEB VERSION
June 17, 2024
In the 2010s, the developers Harry Macklowe and Gary Barnett raced to build what would become the first of midtown Manhattan’s super-tall, super-skinny luxury high-rises such as now populate West 57th Street. Each sought to outdo the other in terms both of height and the buildings’ offered amenities. Soon many other elevator-packed buildings followed, transforming the very fabric of a once-boisterous neighborhood that was full of tourists and theatergoers but also local life. Writing in Books & the Arts’s June print section, Karrie Jacobs remarks, “The buildings are so tall that they’re hard to miss, but so skinny that they look more like a row of smokestacks. They possess a dystopian weirdness that suggests…they were designed more by software than by human architects—and that the software might have made a miscalculation or two.” Walking along West 57th Street, Jacobs gives us a tour, examining how these pencil-thin towers have altered not just the city’s skyline but its street life too. “What happens to a midtown Manhattan street when it’s remade for people who don’t live or work there,” Jacobs asks, “and who come and go intermittently via the massive black Suburbans and Escalades that are perpetually idling near the front doors?” Read “What’s the Deal With Manhattan’s Pencil-Thin High Rises?”→
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Joni Mitchell’s songs can be “deeply and poetically personal,” our music critic David Hajdu writes, and yet they “offer a richness of meticulous particulars that, with no pandering or exaggeration, work through universal feelings.” Despite all of the intimacy of a Mitchell song, it is never just about her—but about us as well. At least that is the thesis of a probing new biography of Mitchell by the veteran music writer Ann Powers. Reviewing Traveling: On the Path of Joni Mitchell for Books & the Arts, Hajdu finds that the book makes a convincing case. Evincing a “deep knowledge of Mitchell’s life and work, American musical culture, and popular culture more broadly,” Powers shows how Mitchell’s music always told a larger story about the world that around her. Not since David Yaffe’s Restless Daughter, Hajdu notes, has a writer taken on Mitchell’s intricate and cryptic songs with such surety and insight. Even the most private of lyrics, or most sorrowful of choruses, is rendered accessible to all. Read “Seeing Ourselves in Joni Mitchell”→
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