The Village: 400 Years of Beats and Bohemians, Radicals and Rogues by John Strausbaugh
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
One of the better books of New York history I've read in a few years. It's actually the second book I've read in the past year about a specific neighborhood, the first being Laurel Canyon, another interesting read.
Although the books covers a lot of ground, it does give short shrift to some interesting aspects of Greenwich Village history, most notably the Off-Off Broadway shows Three Penny Opera and The Fastasticks, which had a profound impact on, not only New York, but the rest of the country. There is only a mention of the cast of Three Penny Opera and nothing of the music.
The paragraph on the Fantasticks was a complete missed opportunity. Not only was the name misspelled--without the "k"--which could have been the result of over-zealous editing--but it only got slightly more attention than Three Penny Opera. Strausbaugh mentions one song, "Try to Remember," in addition to the cast and the fact that it was the longest running show in New York History.
He neglects to mention the fact that the show itself was a victim of 9/11, with the line "Try to remember the kind of September when life was slow and oh, so mellow," which New Yorkers and its few visitors in the aftermath found to poignant a reminder of the city before the disaster. To mention that would have helped fill another void in the book, that of the impact of the 9/11 tragedy on the neighborhood. It gets less attention than Robert Moses' attempt to run an expressway through it.
To a non-New Yorker these things might seem trivial, but the majority of his readership will likely be New Yorkers. But, since its strengths far outweigh it weaknesses, I'll still give it five stars.
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