

desertcart.com: Up in the Old Hotel: 9780679746317: Mitchell, Joseph: Books Review: James Spader turned me on to this one - May sound corny, but the reason I purchased this particular book, was because I saw it first in the Late Night Show with Jimmi Fallon. Actor James Spader was a guest, and as he made his entrance was holding the book, which he presented to Jimmi (yes, we are on first name basis) the book. I immediately grabbed my pen and paper, always on the ready, realizing how susceptible I am for buying things shown in the tube, specially the late night clutter of options. Right before zonked out time, the order was placed in desertcart. I have been watching James Spader in his latest The Black List, which I do not like at all, but I give him credit for past performances, I particularly enjoyed his tv role in Boston Legal, and why not?, in Wolf. The book turned out to be a crowd pleaser (me, and my split personalities), and the stories written with great aplomb, from a writer and journalist, that more than surpasses the knowledge level that is required, truly a man of the pen. Great journalism in a city that never fails to deliver very interesting people, and places. I would say that for the short type essays this book is comprised of, this book is well worth taking the trip down memory lane. Needless to say, I, immediately after, also purchased My Ears are Bent, by the same talented author. I will not bother the well respected, and highly appreciated, lot of desertcart reviewers with a breakdown of the stories, for that is for each lucky reader who holds the book to find its rewards. Sufficient is to say that it is well worthy the price of admission. 4.5 Stars. Review: My late discovery - I pride myself on the amount of reading I have done about New York City but I have to admit that my experience with Joseph Mitchell was extremely limited. I don't know why. It wasn't intentional; it just happened. So, I finally picked up this book, and now, wow! A part of me is full of regret: I had been missing so much. On the other hand, I am experiencing the writing of this great essayist and storyteller for the first time. And as with everything in life that is pleasurable, the first time is usually the best. I am living it up. Joseph Mitchell and his people occupied a New York before my time. (Even though he had passed away when I was quite young, he hadn't published much for years because of his infamous writer's block.) What Mitchell presents is the dirt under New York's fingernails. The characters all live on the cliched fringes of the metropolis. And if they weren't the patrons of McSorley's or some dive or flophouse, they were just as iconic as The Empire State Building or a Lower East Side tenement. As others have mentioned, the Joe Gould essay is as poignant and fascinating as essays get. When I had first heard of Mitchell and his milieu, the words grittiness and realism always seemed to be the adjectives surrounding his work. Immediately, the photographs of the legendary Arthur "Weegee" Fellig came to my mind. However, after reading these tales, this comparison utterly falls on its face. Weegee's works, as much as I admire them, were often staged, and even the ones that weren't have a self-conscious shock value attached. Mitchell's "grittiness" and "realism" is actually naturalist. There is an acceptance, respect and grace to his subjects, and in the writing surrounding the people and places he is describing for us. He had no need to embellish or stage anything. And, for me, a first time reader, this is the biggest source of my enjoyment. Nice meeting you, Mr. Mitchell. And thanks.

| Best Sellers Rank | #98,326 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #193 in Humor Essays (Books) #281 in Essays (Books) #708 in Short Stories Anthologies |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (513) |
| Dimensions | 5.18 x 1.29 x 8 inches |
| Edition | Revised |
| ISBN-10 | 0679746315 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0679746317 |
| Item Weight | 1.15 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 736 pages |
| Publication date | June 1, 1993 |
| Publisher | Vintage |
E**E
James Spader turned me on to this one
May sound corny, but the reason I purchased this particular book, was because I saw it first in the Late Night Show with Jimmi Fallon. Actor James Spader was a guest, and as he made his entrance was holding the book, which he presented to Jimmi (yes, we are on first name basis) the book. I immediately grabbed my pen and paper, always on the ready, realizing how susceptible I am for buying things shown in the tube, specially the late night clutter of options. Right before zonked out time, the order was placed in amazon. I have been watching James Spader in his latest The Black List, which I do not like at all, but I give him credit for past performances, I particularly enjoyed his tv role in Boston Legal, and why not?, in Wolf. The book turned out to be a crowd pleaser (me, and my split personalities), and the stories written with great aplomb, from a writer and journalist, that more than surpasses the knowledge level that is required, truly a man of the pen. Great journalism in a city that never fails to deliver very interesting people, and places. I would say that for the short type essays this book is comprised of, this book is well worth taking the trip down memory lane. Needless to say, I, immediately after, also purchased My Ears are Bent, by the same talented author. I will not bother the well respected, and highly appreciated, lot of amazon reviewers with a breakdown of the stories, for that is for each lucky reader who holds the book to find its rewards. Sufficient is to say that it is well worthy the price of admission. 4.5 Stars.
R**O
My late discovery
I pride myself on the amount of reading I have done about New York City but I have to admit that my experience with Joseph Mitchell was extremely limited. I don't know why. It wasn't intentional; it just happened. So, I finally picked up this book, and now, wow! A part of me is full of regret: I had been missing so much. On the other hand, I am experiencing the writing of this great essayist and storyteller for the first time. And as with everything in life that is pleasurable, the first time is usually the best. I am living it up. Joseph Mitchell and his people occupied a New York before my time. (Even though he had passed away when I was quite young, he hadn't published much for years because of his infamous writer's block.) What Mitchell presents is the dirt under New York's fingernails. The characters all live on the cliched fringes of the metropolis. And if they weren't the patrons of McSorley's or some dive or flophouse, they were just as iconic as The Empire State Building or a Lower East Side tenement. As others have mentioned, the Joe Gould essay is as poignant and fascinating as essays get. When I had first heard of Mitchell and his milieu, the words grittiness and realism always seemed to be the adjectives surrounding his work. Immediately, the photographs of the legendary Arthur "Weegee" Fellig came to my mind. However, after reading these tales, this comparison utterly falls on its face. Weegee's works, as much as I admire them, were often staged, and even the ones that weren't have a self-conscious shock value attached. Mitchell's "grittiness" and "realism" is actually naturalist. There is an acceptance, respect and grace to his subjects, and in the writing surrounding the people and places he is describing for us. He had no need to embellish or stage anything. And, for me, a first time reader, this is the biggest source of my enjoyment. Nice meeting you, Mr. Mitchell. And thanks.
J**.
Great Read!!! Recommend to all!
I started this book the minute I received it. Yes, it does read like fiction, but having lived in NY in the 50's, I related so strongly to the essays/stories in it. It's a delightful read and so beautifully written!
W**Y
Great book - terrible printing job
So far this book is great. However, the Vintage edition starts with the title page, and continues with the introduction and first 44 pages of the book. Then it re-starts again with the title page, the introduction and again the first 44 pages of the book, followed by the rest of the 700+ pages. Seeing that other people have reported missing pages in their editions I guess we should be happy that we just got re-printed pages. Amazing that a reputable publisher like Vintage would do such a horrible job of printing, though.
J**N
New York stories!!!!
Wonderful stories of NYC!
C**A
bygone ny perfectly captured
ah, joseph mitchell...one of the cornerstones upon which the New Yorker was built. absolutely first rate, timeless writing about all sorts of subjects and a link to a long forgotten and wonderful time in NYC when you could get a 50 cent breakfast at a diner and everybody smoked everywhere and jews on the lower east side sold pickles and the cops were all irish and the women were all dames who weren't allowed in McSorley's . i'm not saying it celebrates sexism, i'm saying it captures new york in the forties and fifties. mitchell seeks out the lesser known aspects of new york life: gypsy families and lazy hot afternoons in the park and street preachers and kooks. his writing is graceful and elegant but simple and direct at the same time. just tells it like it is but with flair and no phony 'look at me! i'm a writer!' stuff.
T**Y
Joe Mitchell had a great job. He went to his office every day; sometimes he wrote something, sometimes he did some editing, attended a meeting or two. He'd take off and wander around outside, but not around mid-Manhattan. He'd roam lower New York - the areas that are now the places to live and work, but in the 30s, 40s and 50s were the backwaters of the city - and he'd watch the water. And then he'd - sometimes and not in a hurried way - write about the parts of his adopted city that he was most fascinated and grabbed by and he'd write about the people he met. His writing wasn't strict reportage, but his writing conveyed underlying truths and conveyed and relayed stories honestly. This collection is more than a recorded oral history, or a document of the city: it's of the city and from the city and imbued with the city. Mitchell is on every page - the writing is glorious - and yet he's not more than a shadow at times as he allows his characters the room and space to breathe and live. Mitchell died in the late 90s, and hadn't published anything for decades (though he still showed up at the office) but writing is alive and creates a vivid, tangible and now gone New York. I can't recommend this collection highly enough.
A**A
Personajes muy interesantes y un estilo de contarlo muy guay
坂**広
映画では、しることができないNew Yorkの庶民生活を垣間見ることができる作品です。
C**H
Content wise it's great - but if you're considering it, you already know and like Joseph Mitchell. This copy is a bit large, ugly, and unwieldy compared to the other, "red spine" vintage edition.
R**N
Excellent! Exactly what I ordered. The shipping took a bit of time but what the heck, I got what I wanted and I am happy. Thank you.
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