- Published: 18 May 2017
- ISBN: 9781784872298
- Imprint: Vintage Classics
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 400
- RRP: $29.99
The Heart Of The World
- Published: 18 May 2017
- ISBN: 9781784872298
- Imprint: Vintage Classics
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 400
- RRP: $29.99
A kind of day trip through an X-rated Disneyland, full of hucksterism and magic and tawdry, hard-luck scenes...Cohn weaves a story retrieved from all the histories of New York: the tales of Wall Street and ward-boss politics, of theater and finery and sex, money, power.
Boston Globe
Not since Damon Runyon wrote his fables of Harry the Horse, Sleepout Sam Levinksy and Lone Louie, has Broadway had a chronicler to do justice to its picaresque excess...The Heart of the World is a walk up Broadway, an imaginative leap into its past and its present. Runyon wrote fiction based loosely on fact. Cohn writes fact with the vividly colourful brush-stroke of fiction
Sunday Telegraph
Here comes everybody, a cavalcade of misfits, each their own short story, and Cohn in the role of recording angel
Independent
Of course I'm a Nik Cohn fan. His name is actually kind of a password. If somebody says they know about Nik Cohn, you know that person is literate -- and cool
Jay McInerney
Cohn's walk up Broadway is a fascinating trip for, though the Great White Way has fallen on desperate times, he manages to fit in a lot of the street's history along with his vivid stories about its sleaze-ridden present. His style is electric, crackling with one-liners
Sunday Times
The verbal energy that pours off these pages is enough to transform the hell of places like Times Square into a roughhewn heaven, neon lit and open all night. The history of Broadway has been written before but never better...Overflowing with voluble "animal spirits," it is a feast for anyone who loves good stories. The only thing wrong with it is, it isn't longer.
Newsweek
Published in 1991, The Heart of the World is a collection of oral histories about life on Broadway… The worlds Cohn describes are long gone, replaced by shopping malls and Starbucks. I’d rather remember it his way.
Fiona Wilson, The Times