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   Book Info

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New York: The Unknown City  
Author: Brad Dunn
ISBN: 155152161X
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

Georgia Straight
...a fresh, funny, and truly off-the-grid guide to a city that runs circles around every other metropolis.

Library Journal
...a quirky, irreverent, and just plain nutty look at a great city.

Book Description

It's been said that if you can't find something in New York City, you can't find it anywhere, and that's probably true; rightly so, as New York is one of the world's great cities, if not the greatest of them all. But even the most diehard New Yorker will delight in the pleasures and discoveries to be found in New York: The Unknown City, which unlocks a treasure chest of Gotham's secrets, some dark, some light and some just plain weird.

This guidebook-for residents and visitors alike-will tell you where the bodies are buried and where others have been dug up; where to get the best pizza slice, the best knish and the most expensive martini; how to explore the Hudson River for free via kayak; and how to navigate your way through the wilds of Central Park by streetlight. There are also tales of underground sex clubs; viral outbreaks; a secret tunnel in Grand Central Station; an electrocuted elephant at Coney Island, and -little-known bars, cafes, hangouts and other places to frolic. From the Bowery to Broadway, from the five boroughs to the Five Families, these are the best of the 8 million stories the Naked City has to offer.

Brash, smart, and defiantly unapologetic, this anti-Frommer/Fodor's guidebook-the first American city in Arsenal's alternative travel series-will make you see Gotham City in an entirely new light. You think you know New York? You don't know anything until you've read New York: The Unknown City.

Brad Dunn has written for The New York Times and The New York Daily News. Daniel Hood has worked as an editor for The Wall Street Journal, The New York Daily News, and a number of trade and business publications based in New York. He has also published five novels.

From the Publisher
Arsenal Pulp’s Unknown City series has pried open the unknown, secret bits of Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, and Toronto. And now, we’ve taken on the greatest city in the world. Full of offbeat factoids and surprising anecdotes of interest to locals and travellers alike, New York: The Unknown City arrives. It has the stories that even locals don’t know and the subway maps to get anyone through their first visit to the Big Apple.

About the Author
Brad Dunn has written for the New York Times and the New York Daily News. Daniel Hood has worked as an editor for the Wall Street Journal, the New York Daily News, and a number of trade and business publications based in New York. He has also published five novels.

Excerpted from New York: The Unknown City (The Unknown City) by Brad Dunn, Daniel Hood. Copyright © 2004. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Ten Things about The Unknown New York New York is the only city in North America to have executed an elephant for murder - by electrocution. Only seven states in the U.S. can claim as many restaurants as the five boroughs of New York. The sculptor of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor originally wanted her to stand by a different waterway - the Suez Canal. The Egyptians turned him down. The U.N., the world's talking shop for global peace, is built on the site of a complex of slaughterhouses once known as Blood Alley. Cartier paid for its flagship store on Fifth Avenue with a $1 million string of pearls. There have been four Madison Square Gardens - and only two of them were on Madison Square. The headstones may be gone, but the skeletons aren't: Washington Square Park is a mass grave for thousands of victims of yellow fever. President Franklin Roosevelt used a secret underground tunnel to get from Grand Central to the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. Who is the real Ray behind Famous Ray's Pizza (and its legion of impostors)? He was a big-time mobster in the Lucchese crime family who went to prison for trafficking heroin in the basement of his SoHo pizzeria. New York's original city hall was a tavern. New York's fastest growing sport is cricket.




New York: The Unknown City

FROM THE PUBLISHER

It's been said that if you can't find something in New York City, you can't find it anywhere, and that's probably true; rightly so, as New York is one of the world's great cities, if not the greatest of them all. But even the most diehard New Yorker will delight in the pleasures and discoveries to be found in New York: The Unknown City, which unlocks a treasure chest of Gotham's secrets, some dark, some light and some just plain weird.

This guidebook-for residents and visitors alike-will tell you where the bodies are buried and where others have been dug up; where to get the best pizza slice, the best knish and the most expensive martini; how to explore the Hudson River for free via kayak; and how to navigate your way through the wilds of Central Park by streetlight. There are also tales of underground sex clubs; viral outbreaks; a secret tunnel in Grand Central Station; an electrocuted elephant at Coney Island, and -little-known bars, cafes, hangouts and other places to frolic. From the Bowery to Broadway, from the five boroughs to the Five Families, these are the best of the 8 million stories the Naked City has to offer.

Brash, smart, and defiantly unapologetic, this anti-Frommer/Fodor's guidebook-the first American city in Arsenal's alternative travel series-will make you see Gotham City in an entirely new light. You think you know New York? You don't know anything until you've read New York: The Unknown City.

Brad Dunn has written for The New York Times and The New York Daily News. Daniel Hood has worked as an editor for The Wall Street Journal, The New York Daily News, and a number of trade and businesspublications based in New York. He has also published five novels.

FROM THE CRITICS

Library Journal

Does your library really need another book on New York City? Well, yes, and how about these two different and unique looks at the Big Apple. Solis, a local photogra-pher and writer, goes beneath the streets to present readers with a fascinating glimpse of the architectural wonders few ever chance to see. She features not only the subways but also bridge supports, abandoned rail stations, aqueducts, viaducts, and maxes of tunnels beow Chinatown. In the process, she covers such topics as whether or not there are giant alligators living in the sewers and the devastating effect that the 9/11 attacks had on the underground structures. Above ground, Dunn and Hood, freelance journalists based in New York City, also go beyond the usual landmarks to bring readers humorous accounts of places often overlooked in standard tour guides. How about, for example, checking out the building that has incorporated Art Deco figures of rats climbing up ropes? Or the giant Macy's sign that doesn't belong to Macy's? Will you ever think of the UN in the same way once you read about the land it was built on and its bloody history? This is a fun book to bring along with your Frommer's for a quirky, irreverent, and just plain nutty look at a great city. Both books are highly recommended for all public libraries.-Joseph L. Carlson, Allan Hancock Coll., Santa Maria, CA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

     



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