The Subway Chronicles: Scenes from Life in New York

by Ken Wheaton

Other authorsJacquelin Cangro (Editor)
Paperback, 2006

Status

Available

Call number

813.6

Genres

Publication

Plume (2006), Paperback, 224 pages

Description

Some seven million people board the New York City subway every day, each one with a story to tell. The Subway Chronicles collects twenty-seven of the tales, dramas and comedies that unfold during the daily commute. From the "mole people" living in the subway tunnels, to the transit employees working behind the scenes, to the locals and tourists riding shoulder-to-shoulder in harmony, discord, or indifference, The Subway Chronicles offers a kaleidoscope of perspectives on this most public of spaces. Prominent New York writers weigh in: Jonathan Lethem confesses his childhood subway sins Colson Whitehead offers mass-transit tips for newcomers to the city Francine Prose recalls the thrill and apprehension of riding alone as a teenage girl Calvin Trillin pokes fun at the classic New York tendency to be skeptical about everything Stan Fischler delights in memories of riding the open-air train cars to Coney Island as a boy Equal parts hilarious, poignant, and heartbreaking, The Subway Chronicles is a journey into New York's underground with some of today's most loved writers.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member skinglist
Great collection of short stories that ranged through young peoples' trips through the old IRT and BMT lines to a look at the Moscow subway and the art therein. It was a good look at the history -- the integration of the lines and how hard it was prior to integration and thoughts on the Second
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Avenue subway that made me chuckle given the construction a block from me now and the current state of city financials. Chuckled when one story "surfaced" in mywork subway station. Great read.
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LibraryThing member mstrust
A collection of essays about experiences on the NYC subways or stations by a variety of writers such as Lawrence Block, Calvin Trillin and Francine Prose . In "Transfer" Leigh Stolle tells of taking her elderly, visiting parents on the subway, where her gallant father allowed everyone into the car
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ahead of him until it was too full and he was left behind as his family was whisked away. "Encounter" by Jessie Koester, is about the time the author's subway came to a sudden stop on a July morning. Left in a hot sealed car, the passengers became angry, and then aware that among them was someone very different, and things would become even worse once they were escorted from their car. In "Straphanger Doppelganger", Robert Lanham recalls a time when his friends kept telling him that he had an exact twin in the neighborhood, someone who rode their local subway and looked so much like him that the author felt compelled to seek that man out.

But the thought of some imposter who looked just like me showing up on the New York public transit system shook me to the core. I decided I'd have to kill him. Or at least do a little detective work to ensure he wasn't making me look bad. After all, if he had the audacity to walk around looking like my twin, he at least better not be doing anything stupid."
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Language

Physical description

224 p.; 5.06 inches

ISBN

0452287790 / 9780452287792
Page: 0.1286 seconds