Read Your Way Around the World invites you to Greenwich Village.
Early in its history Greenwich Village was the countryside haven to which New Yorkers fled to escape an outbreak of yellow fever and eventually grew to attract society’s outcasts, ranging from freed slaves to nonconformists seeking to live amongst like-minded people. Those familiar with the geography will be able to pick vividly where Poe lived, where Dylan Thomas drank and where Bob Dylan performed as a newcomer to the Village scene.
(C) Christine L. Walker |
While Greenwich Village is described as an incubator of great artistic, cultural and political ideas, Strausbaugh also tells of a Greenwich Village that lured in the dreamers who were looking to connect but found themselves unable to cope and succumbed to alcoholism, drug addiction and worse. The Village is not just a physical place but an evolving culture unto itself which grew from centuries of attracting creative, radical and rebellious thinkers. It features a huge cast of characters – far too large to fully take in – some of the stories that resonated with me included Mabel Dodge, Djuna Barnes, all of the Beat Generation and the terrible and tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Fire. There are so many more stories, too many to be absorbed in one reading.
Missing from the book is a map to show you where all these events took place, so print yourself off a copy and keep in on hand for a more complete reading experience.
Jonathan Lethem has written a family saga which features three generations of American radicals whose passionate beliefs take the reader from the communist movement in the 1930s to present day Occupy protests.
Strausbaugh’s The Village features an interesting glimpse of Suze Rotolo who was associated with Bob Dylan in the early 1960s, but who chose to remain private about this relationship until shortly before her death when she wrote A Freewheelin’ Time: a memoir of Greenwich Village in the sixties (M).