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New York : An Illustrated History

New York : An Illustrated History

List Price: $69.95
Your Price: $44.07
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: WOW! Ric Burns did a great job on this one.
Review: All I want to say is WOW! This book is wonderful, I recieved it as a Christmas gift, and I just can't put it down. It is just as wonderful as the series. Ric Burns does a great job. Best New York book I ever read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A splendid, informative four century survey of change.
Review: Any fan of New York City history and culture will quickly come to consider this a 'must': it provides both a companion volume to the PBS series and a stand-alone title which will grace coffee tables for generations to come. This isn't to say this is a coffee table volume of slim photos - it's packed with history as lavish as it is in photography and it embraces near four centuries of change in the city from past to present in a sweeping panoramic story. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Contrast of Rich and Poor Vividly Displayed
Review: Every history book has a slant. This one has several, but the most dramatic one is the portrayal of the vast gulf between rich and poor that has long been part of New York City's uniqueness. Each side gets a lot of attention. A secondary slant is the theme of the city's change from a rural area into a metropolis with manufacturing to the modern city mostly of financial markets, stores, entertainment, and residents.

To keep it interesting, the book also goes out of its way to provide little known factoids. For example, Manhattan was probably purchased for cash rather than trinkets and the value of the cash was closer to $600 than the famed $24 we all have heard so much about (someone used the wrong currency exchange rate in the past). There's a nice story about the origins of Typhoid Mary, who inadvertently poisoned those she cooked for. You will also learn that disease was once so rampant that 1 in 25 adults died each year. Without immigrants, the city would not have grown.

Those who are descended from those who immigrated through Ellis Island into one of the ethnic neighborhoods will find many photos to remind them of their heritage. There are also excellent photographic perspectives on the development of the African American community beginning from the Dutch slaveholding days.

The development of the major bridges is one of the visual pleasures of the book. The building of Central Park is a close second. The water piping pictures are quite remarkable, as well.

The book will delight those who do not know much about New York City, but would like to know more. Coming from California, New York City did not get much attention in the history books after the Revolutionary War except when financial markets crumbled. So much of this was new to me.

The book will probably be even more of a delight to those who are from New York City. This is almost like a family album.

I got a lot of pleasure from seeing how areas in the city that I know well have changed over the years. In many cases, you get to see an intersection as a farm, then as a tenement, then as a skyscraper, and sometimes even as a second (more famous) skyscraper.

There is also a lot that is missing. You will find little about higher education (except the building of Columbia in Morningside Heights), museums, libraries, and the magnificent interior art in New York. Performing arts are almost excluded except for Vaudeville and Broadway. The development of air transportation and television are also little developed. But one volume cannot do everything.

When you are done, ask yourself, "What are the irresistible forces about a great city that must be taken advantage of?" That can be a useful guide to ordinary citizens as well as those who provide services in such metropolises.

Have a great visit to New York City!



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Contrast of Rich and Poor Vividly Displayed
Review: Every history book has a slant. This one has several, but the most dramatic one is the portrayal of the vast gulf between rich and poor that has long been part of New York City's uniqueness. Each side gets a lot of attention. A secondary slant is the theme of the city's change from a rural area into a metropolis with manufacturing to the modern city mostly of financial markets, stores, entertainment, and residents.

To keep it interesting, the book also goes out of its way to provide little known factoids. For example, Manhattan was probably purchased for cash rather than trinkets and the value of the cash was closer to $600 than the famed $24 we all have heard so much about (someone used the wrong currency exchange rate in the past). There's a nice story about the origins of Typhoid Mary, who inadvertently poisoned those she cooked for. You will also learn that disease was once so rampant that 1 in 25 adults died each year. Without immigrants, the city would not have grown.

Those who are descended from those who immigrated through Ellis Island into one of the ethnic neighborhoods will find many photos to remind them of their heritage. There are also excellent photographic perspectives on the development of the African American community beginning from the Dutch slaveholding days.

The development of the major bridges is one of the visual pleasures of the book. The building of Central Park is a close second. The water piping pictures are quite remarkable, as well.

The book will delight those who do not know much about New York City, but would like to know more. Coming from California, New York City did not get much attention in the history books after the Revolutionary War except when financial markets crumbled. So much of this was new to me.

The book will probably be even more of a delight to those who are from New York City. This is almost like a family album.

I got a lot of pleasure from seeing how areas in the city that I know well have changed over the years. In many cases, you get to see an intersection as a farm, then as a tenement, then as a skyscraper, and sometimes even as a second (more famous) skyscraper.

There is also a lot that is missing. You will find little about higher education (except the building of Columbia in Morningside Heights), museums, libraries, and the magnificent interior art in New York. Performing arts are almost excluded except for Vaudeville and Broadway. The development of air transportation and television are also little developed. But one volume cannot do everything.

When you are done, ask yourself, "What are the irresistible forces about a great city that must be taken advantage of?" That can be a useful guide to ordinary citizens as well as those who provide services in such metropolises.

Have a great visit to New York City!



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fantastic
Review: Great book for anyone interested in the history of New York City or in "The City" in general. This book offers quite an extensive history lesson from the 17th century until today and plenty of great images of the city. I have a greater appreciation for all that New York is and has been and for its role in shaping the USA. Its fun to look at pictures of how things were many years ago and to compare those pictures to how New York looks today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fantastic
Review: Great book for anyone interested in the history of New York City or in "The City" in general. This book offers quite an extensive history lesson from the 17th century until today and plenty of great images of the city. I have a greater appreciation for all that New York is and has been and for its role in shaping the USA. Its fun to look at pictures of how things were many years ago and to compare those pictures to how New York looks today.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'm a New York City Junkie
Review: I read this textbook-like coffee table book from corner to corner and since I lap up New York history I loved it. Burns could have included so much more on Moses but didn't though. Still, and outstanding compilation of information. Plus, a beautiful book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'm a New York City Junkie
Review: I read this textbook-like coffee table book from corner to corner and since I lap up New York history I loved it. Burns could have included so much more on Moses but didn't though. Still, and outstanding compilation of information. Plus, a beautiful book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must-have!
Review: I remember glancing at this book for the first time last spring, at the bookstore in Jersey Gardens...I must have been in there for over an hour, and even made myself comfortable sitting on the floor. This book is just great; and although it's next to impossible to squeeze every detail about NYC into one book (Try 'Gotham' if that's what you're going for), this book is definately one of the finest out there. I knew within the first 5 minutes that I wanted this book. The pictures and drawings featured are simply amazing, and would fascinate any NYC history buff for sure. Point in case- Get this book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: New York is the world's greatest city
Review: New York is the world's greatest city. How many cities in the world merit the sort of treatment Ric Burns give New York in a book that is easily twice the size of a typical text that might cover, say, all of American History. I must have re-read sections of this book a dozen times or more. This is truly a book that measures up to New York's grandeur.


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