At the heart of the non-stop bustle of modern Times Square stands One
Times Square, the former headquarters of the New York Times and the
skyscraper now all but invisible behind billboards that gave the square
its name in 1904. Around it, a once-humble district of carriage houses
and coal merchants at the intersection of Broadway and Seventh Avenue
evolved into "The Crossroads of the World." Here impresarios and
real-estate moguls vied to outdo each other as they built theaters and
hotels, penny arcades and restaurants, dime museums and office towers in
an unending cycle of reinvention and reimagination.
More than
any other public space in New York City, Times Square is the place where
Americans have gathered, in good times and in bad, to catch up on the
latest news, to mark historic occasions, or just to meet a few friends.
From the Stock Market crash in 1929 when the building's iconic "Zipper"
provided up-to-the-minute information to the celebrations marking the
end of the Second World War, to annual New Year's Eve festivities with
the iconic descending lighted ball, the square and its tower have been
an integral part of our history.
One Times Square explores the
story of this fascinating intersection, starting when Broadway was a
mere dirt path known as Bloomingdale Road, through the district's
decades of postwar decay, to its renewal as a glittering
tourist-friendly media mecca. McKendry's meticulous, lush watercolors
take readers behind the famous Camel billboard to find out how it blew
smoke rings over the square for 25 years, to the top of the Times Tower
to see how the New Year's ball has made its descent for over 100 years,
and onto construction sites as buildings grow up around One Times Square
to dwarf what once ranked among the tallest buildings in the world.
Check Catalog
Books and More for Children
Click on links to check the catalog.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment