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So that it doesn't happen again....
It was like watching someone die day by dayIn the late 80s, I learned what once was on the site of the current MSG/Penn Station monstrosity and became appalled that people could let a beautiful work of art be dismantled and replaced with a horrible building. In the early 1990s, I learned about the 1950s and 1960s and how Americans were obsessed with all things modern and new, rejecting anything with a hint of age or ornament.
Moore & Moore take a pictorial look on how the McKim, Mead and White's neoclassical masterpiece was dismantled over a multi-year period in the mid-1960s. While they really don't go into detail on why the old Penn Station was demolished, the spooky, B & W photos tell more than how an architectural gem was demolished. On a deeper level, the photos tell the tale of how an entire city was becoming irrelevant to suburban America and was sinking into massive decline (the years of municipal bankrupcy and burning neighborhoods in the South Bronx are only a few years away).
It was a very sad book that gets more depressing with each turn of the page, as more and more of the beauty of the old Penn Station gets stripped away. I guess that was the power of the photographs working on me.
Pair this book up with Robert Caro's _The Power Broker_ to get a good picture of New York in the early Baby Boom era.
Must-buy for New York and/or McKim, Mead & White BuffsPhotographer Peter Moore and his wife Barbara moved into the Penn Station neighborhood in the early sixties. They used the building every day, whether they were passing through to the subway or catching a bite in the cavernous coffee shop.
With the railroad's permission, they documented its slow dismantling over the four years from 1963-1967. This book is the first appearance of that work. The black and white pictures are arranged chronologically, showing the faded but still magnificent station from its last days of active use through to its ghostly presence as a metal shell. The photography is beautiful and lyrical and sad beyond words, like a mournful love song to a love lost. The picures of the rubble-filled waiting room, its shape still intact but its side walls gone, are especially hard to take.
One note: this is not an exhaustive review of the building and its various spaces. It is a chrono picture of the concourse and waiting room through through their destruction. For more pics of the station in use, try "The Late, Great, Pennsylvania Station."


where is new york?
Great Book!!
FABULOUS FUNNY FEROCIOUS

A Greenwich Village Classic
Excellent book about my favorite part of New York
Beautifully done.

Summer in Clearfield
Full of wonderful memories
Thank you

Color abounds. A fly fishing masterpiece.
Excellent Book
This book has made my gift shopping a no-brainer!The author ends his introduction, trying to define the almost supernatural power inherent in the Catskill fly-fishing tradition, with these words: "I believe it is this power -- call it passion, dedication, commitment, vision, love, or what you will -- that has inspired the myriad fly fishers who in small ways and large have created, fought for, and extended a great sporting tradition in a hallowed land, and I respect the honor of presenting them, their feats, and their little rivers in these pages."
With this book, Mac Francis does more than simply honor a great tradition; he and Land of Little Rivers become a part of it.


The Definitive Guide to Skiing and 'Boarding this Region
Finally, an all-inclusive resource!
A must for the Mid-Atlantic AreaWho says there's no skiing in the Mid-Atlantic??? Read this book!!!!


very helpful...
A Wonderful ResourceBuy it today. You'll love it.
Still the Best

BREATH TAKING!
New York Vertical Rules!Thanks Horst.
New York at it's Most Elegant

Made me nostalgic for the towers.
A remarkable building remembered
HealingThe people who lived through it get to see what the rest of the world saw. A look of what they went through which can help them validate the emotions they are feeling.
The folks that witnessed it from a distance get a closer look of what our fellow americans went through.
All of it is a healing process that we need and looking at it through pictures or written stories of our friends will help us understand our human bond living in this beautiful country.


Every Street Name Origin in Manhattan!Highly recommended if you are into New York City history.
Cool Book for New York-PhilesChapters, which are divided by areas on the island such as Upper East Side, Inwood, and Harlem, discusses the origin of many street, park, and neighborhood names. The author, who briefly gives the origin of the place name in a simple sentence or two, apparently has done some deep research at a local library or archive in order to amass such an extensive list of information. With a great cover design and feel, the book captured my attention at a local bookstore. Overall, the book is a must for anyone who loves the City that Never Sleeps. It's a great book for a great price, which today can be a rarity.
THE BEST NYC BOOK OUT THERE!