Archive for the ‘Manhattan’ Category
Pattern #69.2—“Curbside Parlor”
The addition of a bench around the tree completed the public space. Had you been walking east on 12th Street between Avenues A and B and passed Northern Spy prior to that time, you might have kept staring down at your iPhone and noticed a restaurant on your left only peripherally. Oh. Gotta check that [...]
Filed under: city, curbside parlor, Manhattan, pattern language, placemaking | 2 Comments
Morning scene #42
“Memphis versus St. Louis…” He waited. “St. Louis,” she answered quietly, looking down at the paper. “New Mexico versus Long Beach State?” “Long Beach State.” He held his pen three inches above the sheet on his right leg as he sat. His starched white shirt cuff ventured out from the sleeve of his blue pinstripe [...]
Filed under: children, Manhattan, parenting, subway | Leave a Comment
They come for the money
“Ma’am!” the voice came from a bullhorn on the roof of the 7-story building across the street. “Please close your window immediately!” I saw men with rifles. Our living room was on the 6th and top floor of a pre-war building, overlooking Madison Avenue. My mother’s reaction was to stare even more intently catty-corner to [...]
Filed under: Manhattan, Upper East Side | 2 Comments
Not so much human
Parents tend to say things about their kids like, ‘She made me so angry, I just wanted to wring her neck!’ Yet when we see them sleeping at night—when we stoop over them in the dark and gaze: their relaxed facial muscles, their eyelashes and, yes, their closed mouths—our children look not so much human [...]
Filed under: Manhattan | 3 Comments
Tags: parenting
Isosceles triangles
He had silver-gray hair that must have been braided, twisted into a bun under a hunter’s ballcap. Faded brown scene of deer and thicket. A pencil was shoved point first into his nest under the cap on the left. Occasionally he turned his head to reveal a soft Santa Claus beard, about 18 inches long [...]
Filed under: Manhattan | 4 Comments
Tags: aging, cafes, West Village



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