From Publishers Weekly
New York's undersung borough of Queens, home to the new Ellis Island (the city's airports), may be the most diverse county in the country today, and documentarians Lehrer and Sloan have innovatively brought it to life. First-person narratives that sometimes intertwine several voices (some were broadcast on the public radio program The Next Big Thing) are matched by a bold and colorful layout: large portraits, long-view landscapes, multiple typefaces (sometimes within the same paragraph) and inset graphics or asides. The stories are grouped in five lower-case sections: "contemporary pilgrims," "asylum seekers," "family ties," "neighborhood tales" and "unlikely coexistences" (Ping-Pong players, a high school, a punk-gypsy cabaret band). The language can be poetic; a Congolese asylum-seeker declares, "Wackenhut is a for-profit business they are making from the sorrow of detainees." Two Egyptian restaurateurs, brothers, lament gentrification: "You really killed yourself with the atmosphere you created." A Russian emigre expresses disbelief that a call to 911 would actually bring the cops. Some interviewees express melancholy about their move, but they generally agree-an old American story-that opportunities are better for their kids. An accompanying CD (sold separately if you buy the paperback) includes interview excerpts as well as music by the authors and some of their subjects. While some of the texture of Queens is sacrificed-you wouldn't know the library system is the busiest in the country-this book remains an arresting, vividly printed mosaic.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Review
This stunningly innovative book goes beyond pathos, into the kaleidoscope of experience that defines real immigrant life. (Debbie Nathan -
City Limits )
One of the most important stories in New York..the authors know immigrants as individuals. That's the way it should be. (Dean Ulsher, Producer -
WNYC )
One of the best books ever! Thank you for telling these stories. (Faith Middleton -
Faith Middleton Show, Connecticut Public Radio )
Fascinating.... this extraordinary volume...provides a glimpse of the new America which is emerging. (Ron Daniels, Executive Director, Center for Constitutional Rights )
Explodes the paradigms of oral history and reinterpreti[s] them for our multimedia century... (Archivist Roundtable of New York: Winner, Innovative Use of Archive Award )
Brings alive the most polyglot place on the planet....An outstanding book on the new New York! (John Kuo Wei Tchen, Historian, New York University, co-founder of the Museum of Chinese in the Americas )
Brims over with the energy, heart and spirit that went into creating this important work. (Dave Isay, documentary radio artist,
Ghetto Life 101,
The Sunshine Hotel,
Witness to an Execution )
Boldly carries the tradition of oral history into the 21st Century. An electrifying collage of voices, faces, and spirits. (Eve Ensler, author of
The Vagina Monologues )
An incredible, moving story...Oral history with a twist. (Marco Werman -
The World, BBC )
A fascinating book....Filled with vivid descriptions and very human, powerful, poignant stories. (Michael Krasny -
Forum, KQED )