Authors: David Remnick (Editor), David Remnick
ISBN-13: 9780375757150, ISBN-10: 0375757155
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Date Published: November 2001
Edition: MODERN LIB
David Remnick has been the editor of The New Yorker since 1998. A staff writer for the magazine from 1992 to 1998, he was previously The Washington Post's correspondent in the Soviet Union. The author of several books, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize and the George Polk Award for his 1994 book Lenin's Tomb. He lives in New York with his wife and children.
In keeping with its tradition of sending writers out into America to take the pulse of our citizens and civilization, The New Yorker over the past decade has reported on the unprecedented economy and how it has changed the ways in which we live.
These essays, all of which were written during this time of unprecedented American prosperity, and culled by Remnick from the New Yorker, give readers the opportunity to view--up close and personal--the current economic boom's effect on the average and not-so-average among us. Notables profiled (in a section entitled "The Barons") include ber-developer Donald Trump and Microsoft founder Bill Gates, who give readers the opportunity to ponder the different ways people define what, exactly, constitutes "rich." For Gates, money is very much a by-product of his desire to create hegemony. For Trump, it's a fulfillment of the adage that he who dies with the most--and most ostentatious--toys, wins. Sections entitled "The Web" and "The Life" give the newly rich the skinny on how and where to spend a fortune while not looking as if they've done so. Remnick doesn't exclude those not blessed by the boom economy. He presents the recently paroled Jessica, a Hispanic woman whose looks and vulnerability were her ticket to a brutal stint as the girlfriend of a Bronx drug lord; and we also see James Wilcox, whose widely acclaimed comic novels have failed to bring in enough money to keep him very far from eating in the soup kitchen where he regularly volunteers. Readers don't need to be rich to enjoy this volume, but they need a healthy curiosity about the impact of money--and its absence. (Nov. ) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Acknowledgments | ||
Introduction | ||
The Barons | ||
The Connector (Jason McCabe Calacanis) | 3 | |
Everywoman.Com (Martha Stewart) | 13 | |
The Fountainhead (Alan Greenspan) | 23 | |
Trump Solo (Donald Trump) | 43 | |
Hard Core (Bill Gates) | 65 | |
The Web | ||
The Gilder Effect | 111 | |
Clicks and Mortar | 125 | |
The A-List E-List | 137 | |
The Kids in the Conference Room | 139 | |
The Woman in the Bubble | 150 | |
The Age | ||
Marisa and Jeff | 165 | |
No Man's Town | 179 | |
Six Degrees of Lois Weisberg | 189 | |
The Quarter of Living Dangerously | 206 | |
Landing from the Sky | 222 | |
Moby Dick in Manhattan | 243 | |
Sweat Is Good | 261 | |
A Sense of Change | 277 | |
Metamoney | 281 | |
Display Cases | 287 | |
After Seattle | 297 | |
They Love Me! | 315 | |
The Life | ||
Mr. Lucky | 333 | |
The Inn Crowd | 343 | |
My Misspent Youth | 352 | |
A Hazard of No Fortune | 360 | |
I Want This Apartment | 371 | |
High-Heel Heaven | 380 | |
A Party for Brooke | 393 | |
Conscientious Consumption | 403 | |
Our Money, Ourselves | 406 | |
Who Speaks for the Lazy? | 419 | |
Acquired Taste | 426 | |
What Happened to My Money? | 433 | |
After Welfare | 435 |