NEW YORK QUOTES IV

quotations about New York

I love New York. You can pop out of the Underworld in Central Park, hail a taxi, head down Fifth Avenue with a giant hellhound loping behind you, and nobody even looks at you funny.

RICK RIORDAN

The Last Olympian


In New York you've got to have all the luck.

CHARLES BUKOWSKI

Notes of a Dirty Old Man

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My hair is always at its best in New York. I don't know what's in the water. It could be mousse.

ELLEN DEGENERES

TV Guide, November 21-27, 2005

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New York is an ugly city, a dirty city. Its climate is a scandal, its politics are used to frighten children, its traffic is madness, its competition is murderous. But there is one thing about it -- once you have lived in New York and it has become your home, no place else is good enough.

JOHN STEINBECK

America and Americans and Selected Nonfiction

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New York is not just about heterogeneity, a quality other metropolises share. Neither is New York's cultural claim to cosmopolitanism particularly unique at this time in history. Other world cities exhibit similar signs of cultural cosmopolitanism, with fragments of different world cultures constituting the visual fabrics of their urban facades. What is worth studying about New York is its rigorous, democratic machine of political cosmopolitan citizenship. Becoming a New Yorker is not just about the consumption of multicultural sensations in a globally mediated environment. It is more challengingly about a set of performative engagements that activate and promote mutual respect and coexistence within the finite spaces of the metropolis. This socially contestatory, culturally volatile, yet rational endeavor is ultimately a utopian undertaking in political citizenship.

MAY JOSEPH

Fluid New York: Cosmopolitan Urbanism and the Green Imagination


New York is unfinished. But business goes on just the same. Business is continuous. Everything else in New York is subservient to business. If New York would only stop talking about its side shows, its buildings, its Broadway, its class, its style, its civic pride, and put a sign at every approach: BUSINESS GOING ON DURING ALTERATIONS, people would know what to expect and many outside visitors would be saved disappointment.

WILLIAM HENRY MCMASTERS

"On New York--A City In Process", Originality and Other Essays


Out of the night you burn, Manhattan,
In a vesture of gold--
Spun of innumerable arcs,
Flaring and multiplying--
Gold at the uttermost circles fading
Into the tenderest hint of jade,
Or fusing in tremulous twilight blues,
Robing the far-flung offices,
Scintillant-storied, forking flame,
Or soaring to luminous amethyst
Over the steeples aureoled.

LOLA RIDGE

"Manhattan"

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In vain does the stranger look for the New Yorker type, the man of the classy magazines. Instead he sees nervous, gaunt-faced men by day, and evening-clothed, dull-eyed, prematurely old men at night, hurrying, hustling, scrambling, rushing, wither nobody knows.

WILLIAM HENRY MCMASTERS

"On New York--A City In Process", Originality and Other Essays


New York is itself an act of will, and to live in and with New York requires a matching set of will. One must be prepared to love New York without requiring that it love you back. The New York Nationalist understands this early; he senses that New York is too large, too grand, too much an idea in itself, too filled with multiple universes of function and feeling to care about any of us, one at a time.

PETE HAMILL

"Notes of a New York Nationalist", New York Magazine, June 5, 1972


Anytime four New Yorkers get into a cab together without arguing, a bank robbery has just taken place.

JOHNNY CARSON

The Tonight Show

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New York: where everyone mutinies but no one deserts.

HARRY HERSHFIELD

attributed, Rand Lindsly's Quotations


To outsiders, it may seem that that fusion of souls called New Yorkers has arthritis in its middle finger from overuse. But it is merely people's way of greeting each other as they run around like ferrets on double espressos with little or no time to make illiterate requests upon the art of conversation.

BERT RANDOLPH SUGAR

introduction, The Ultimate Book of New York Lists


I became disenchanted with New York when I realized that I felt as if I had accomplished something when I picked up the laundry and got the Times and a quart of milk. I spent a lot of time worrying about alternate-side parking. I lived on the fourth floor of a brownstone. If I had messed up and hadn't jockeyed my car to the right side of the street for the next day and somebody moved their car at four o'clock in the morning, it was an automatic response, in winter or summer, maybe I put my slippers on, but I would run down in my pajamas and get that place. All of a sudden I thought, This is absolutely ridiculous.

ANN BEATTIE

The Paris Review, spring 2011

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New York was no mere city. It was instead an infinitely romantic notion, the mysterious nexus of all love and money and power, the shining and the perishable dream itself. To think of 'living' there was to reduce the miraculous to the mundane; one does not 'live' at Xanadu.

JOAN DIDION

"Xanadu", NY Daily Quote, August 8, 2010

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Sometimes I get bored riding down the beautiful streets of L.A. I know it sounds crazy, but I just want to go to New York and see people suffer.

DONNA SUMMER

attributed, Rand Lindsly's Quotations


Old New York City is a friendly old town
From Washington Heights to Harlem on down
There's a-mighty many people all millin' all around
They'll kick you when you're up and knock you when you're down
It's hard times in the city
Livin' down in New York town

BOB DYLAN

"Hard Times in New York Town"

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The genius of survival here is not to make one's self into steel; you become bamboo, bending in the wind, not snapping.

PETE HAMILL

"Notes of a New York Nationalist", New York Magazine, June 5, 1972


New York City subways are now getting high speed Internet. How about some high speed subway trains?

DAVID LETTERMAN

Late Show with David Letterman, July 27, 2011

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The subtlest change in New York is something people don't speak much about but that is in everyone's mind. The city, for the first time in its long history, is destructible. A single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions. The intimation of mortality is part of New York now: in the sounds of jets overhead, in the black headlines of the latest edition. All dwellers in cities must dwell with the stubborn fact of annihilation; in New York the fact is somewhat more concentrated because of the concentration of the city itself and because, of all targets, New York has a certain clear priority. In the mind of whatever perverted dreamer who might loose the lightning, New York must hold a steady, irresistible charm.

E. B. WHITE

"Here Is New York", Holiday

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New York--the Upper West Side more specifically--this was the city of my choosing. I went to college there, then graduate school, but was certainly not from there, never rooted, always transient. I finished school and stayed, still feeling as though I were on some kind of long-term student schedule, on an emotional visa that let me stay as long as I liked without ever becoming a resident. I carried a Tennessee driver's license for 10 years after I stopped living there and only gave it up when it was pickpocketed from my bag. In Manhattan, it didn't matter. I didn't need a license. I had no need for a car. You needed to rent a car only when you intended to leave the city, which I could go months without doing.

TOVA MIRVIS

"From Somewhere", Boston Globe Mazazine, September 28, 2013

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