New York (novel)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

New York: a Novel
OCLC
613432261
Edward Rutherfurd talks about New York novel on Bookbits radio.

New York: a Novel (2009) is an

historical novel by British novelist Edward Rutherfurd. The United States edition is published by Doubleday
under the title New York: The Novel.

Synopsis

The novel chronicles the birth and growth of New York City, from the arrival of the first Dutch and other European colonists in the 17th century to the summer of 2009. Rutherford builds his novel on the histories of fictional families who live there. In New York, these families represent the successive waves of immigrants who have made the city multicultural.

The early Dutch founders of

enslaved African, who was brought forcefully to New Amsterdam
and is held by Thomas Master; his descendants become part of the New York cultural mix.

As the novel progresses, more families are introduced: the Irish O'Donnels, German Kellers, Italian Carusos, German-Jewish Adlers, and Puerto Rican Campos. Through their intertwining stories, Rutherfurd explores the various cultural traditions of the national groups and intercultural relations, which play out against the development of the city.

Rutherfurd breaks the narrative into sections by date, twenty-seven in all. Most dates comprise one chapter; a few dates continue through two or three chapters. A set of three well-drawn maps of

Manhattan Island
helps the reader follow the action as the city develops. A fourth map of the New York City region provides a larger geographical context.

Critical reception

Brigitte Weeks of The Washington Post praised the novel and advised readers against trying to determine the accuracy of every name or event:

But analyzing the veracity of every incident will spoil the fun, and what makes this novel so entertaining is the riotous, multilayered portrait of a whole metropolis. Rutherfurd offers the reader a chance to watch a rural outcrop grow into one of the world's greatest cities in a mere 350 years. He delivers magnificently on the challenge; it is hard to imagine any other writer combining such astonishing depth of research with the imagination and ingenuity to hold it all together.[1]

New York won the

Langum Prize for American Historical Fiction in 2010.[2]

See also

References

External links

  • Edward Rutherfurd website [1]