Chronic City

Hardcover, 480 pages

Published Oct. 13, 2009 by Doubleday.

ISBN:
978-0-385-51863-5
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3 stars (12 reviews)

6 editions

Second reading

4 stars

1) "I first met Perkus Tooth in an office. Not an office where he worked, though I was confused about this at the time. (Which is itself hardly an uncommon situation, for me.)"

2) "Haven't you wondered why the average consumer is uncomfortable with letterboxed movies? It isn't because most people are programmed to be Philistines, though they are. Cable channels go on offering scan-and-pan versions to keep people from having to consider that frame's edge, which reminds them of all they're not seeing. That glimpse is intolerable. When your gaze slips beyond the edge of a book of magazine, you notice the ostensible texture of everyday reality, the table beneath the magazine, say, or the knee of your pants. When your eye slips past the limit of the letterboxed screen, you're faced with what's framed and projected in that margin—it ought to be something, but instead it's nothing …

Review of 'Chronic City' on Goodreads

3 stars

1) ''To live in Manhattan is to be persistently amazed at the worlds squirreled inside one another, the chaotic intricacy with which realms interleave, like those lines of television cable and fresh water and steam heat and outgoing sewage and telephone wire and whatever else which cohabit in the same intestinal holes that pavement-demolishing workmen periodically wrench open to the daylight and to our passing, disturbed glances. We only pretend to live on something as orderly as a grid.''

2) ''Countering that uncomfortable suspicion was the sense that the vision the chaldrons had opened to our eyes, however hopeless to define generally, was in part a glimpse of a world in which the Woodrow's and Spencer's empire of inherited privilege, of provenances and exclusions, was exposed as ersatz, fever-stricken, unsustainable. The object seemed to explode in our hearts with a wholeness that disproved Manhattan's ancient powers, though those towered everywhere …

Subjects

  • Literature & Fiction -- Literary