Guidebooks
The standard guidebook to New York City is the Michelin Green Guide
. You can carry it in a coat pocket. It is well-organized. It has lots
of little maps. But it is kind of boring. I usually love the Cadogan City Guides
and their New York offering
is a reasonable example of the breed. Personal, literate,
and with suggestions that you won't find anywhere else, it pains me to say that
the book falls short of its competition in the area of photographs and maps.
My new favorite guidebook to New York is the Eyewitness guide (Dorling-Kindersley).
Profusely illustrately with brilliant three-dimensional
maps, this is the book to carry if you don't want to be disoriented. The city is
more than a little too big to fit into any 250-page guidebook so don't think that
you're going to learn too much from one book.
If you are really going to be a building nerd then you want the Aia Guide to New York City
. Alternatively, Gerard R. Wolfe's walking tours
will give you the same information organized in a more
tourist-friendly manner.

Literature
In my experience, the greatest writer about New York is my favorite American
author, Edith Wharton. She basically wrote two kinds of novels. The first kind is
about what it is like to be poor and living in miserable cold and boring western
Massachusetts. Titles here include Ethan Frome
and
Summer
. The second kind is about what it is like to be rich and socially prominent and
living on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. These include House of Mirth and Age of Innocence
. Both are set in the late 19th century. I really like the Library of America edition of Wharton's novels.
It doesn't cost that much more than the
paperbacks of the four novels it includes and you will be proud to hand it down
to your grandchildren.
If
Wharton's novels, which usually end in suicide, disappointment or financial ruin,
are too sunny for you, then your turn-of-the-century author is Theodore Dreiser.
His most New York book is Sister Carrie
.
If you want rich and light, The Great Gatsby
is a good place to start on F. Scott Fitzgerald.
If you want a more modern take on the city, then read Bright Lights, Big City.
Jay McInerney earns my eternal awe for this one line: "she had a voice
like the New Jersey State Anthem played on an electric razor." Prince of Tides
gives an outsider's perspective on the city.
Nonfiction accounts of life in New York City can be just as richly textured.
The rash of social services created in response to Jacob A. Riis's How the Other Half Lives : Studies Among the Tenements of New York
demonstrated that sometimes
the pen is, if not mightier than the sword, at least fairly mighty. If you want
to see how 17th century Poland mixes with 20th century Brooklyn, read Lis
Harris's excellent Holy Days : The World of a Hasidic Family
. Liar's Poker
is
a brilliant account of life on Wall Street in the 1980s.
If you don't know how to read, then watch some Woody Allen videos, or Breakfast at Tiffany's
. Winner of the 1949(?) Best Picture, Marty
gives
some insight into the small-time New York merchant's life. Scent of a Woman
should give you some ideas on how to live high in the Manhattan of the
1990s.