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Life New York: How I Learned to Love Squeegee Men, Token Suckers, Trash Twisters, and Subway Sharks
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Life New York: How I Learned to Love Squeegee Men, Token Suckers, Trash Twisters, and Subway Sharks
Current price: $15.95
Barnes and Noble
Life New York: How I Learned to Love Squeegee Men, Token Suckers, Trash Twisters, and Subway Sharks
Current price: $15.95
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Size: Paperback
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Winner of:
2015 Seven Sister Books Award, Nonfiction
Laura Pedersen, author of bestseller
Play Money
and award-winning
Buffalo Gal
, serves up a hilarious memoir about three decades of city life. Originally from Buffalo, NY, friends thought the seventeen year old was suffering from blizzard delirious when she left Buffalo for Manhattan. Pedersen experiences her adopted city in the best and worst of times while becoming the youngest person to have a seat on the stock exchange, performing stand up comedy, and writing a column in the
New York Times
. Neighborhoods that feature chai bars, Pilates studios, and Gymboree were once drug dens, ganglands, and shantytowns. A trip to Central park often ended in central booking, identifying a perp in a lineup.
New Yorkers are as diverse as the city they so colorfully inhabit, cautious but generous, brash but welcoming. Both are captured through the comedic eye of Pedersen. Enjoy an uproarious romp down memory lane as the city emerges as the modern metropolis we know today.
2015 Seven Sister Books Award, Nonfiction
Laura Pedersen, author of bestseller
Play Money
and award-winning
Buffalo Gal
, serves up a hilarious memoir about three decades of city life. Originally from Buffalo, NY, friends thought the seventeen year old was suffering from blizzard delirious when she left Buffalo for Manhattan. Pedersen experiences her adopted city in the best and worst of times while becoming the youngest person to have a seat on the stock exchange, performing stand up comedy, and writing a column in the
New York Times
. Neighborhoods that feature chai bars, Pilates studios, and Gymboree were once drug dens, ganglands, and shantytowns. A trip to Central park often ended in central booking, identifying a perp in a lineup.
New Yorkers are as diverse as the city they so colorfully inhabit, cautious but generous, brash but welcoming. Both are captured through the comedic eye of Pedersen. Enjoy an uproarious romp down memory lane as the city emerges as the modern metropolis we know today.