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Manhattan Transfer
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
8 posts | 15 read | 17 to read
Considered by many to be John Dos Passos's greatest work, Manhattan Transfer is an "expressionistic picture of New York" (New York Times) in the 1920s that reveals the lives of wealthy power brokers and struggling immigrants alike. From Fourteenth Street to the Bowery, Delmonico's to the underbelly of the city waterfront, Dos Passos chronicles the lives of characters struggling to become a part of modernity before they are destroyed by it. More than seventy-five years after its first publication, Manhattan Transfer still stands as "a novel of the very first importance" (Sinclair Lewis). It is a masterpeice of modern fiction and a lasting tribute to the dual-edged nature of the American dream.
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Daisey
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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On my way home from school I listen to a chapter of A Passage to India. It seems to be getting more interesting as we get into Part 2.

Then, I take a walk with Luthien and listen to Manhattan Transfer. I‘m struggling to stay engaged with this one. There‘s a lot of jumping from character to character, and it‘s tough to keep track of them all. Sometimes I completely lose the thread and have to backtrack, but the setting of New York is ever present.

SamAnne I read Manhattan Transfer earlier. I decided it was a book that was just throwing moments and people/characters at me. I ended up not focusing on keeping track of every character's trajectory. All the scenes are so moment in time. And you are right--the real character is New York City in the 1920s. And I did find it fascinating. 7mo
Daisey @SamAnne Your comments go along with a few reviews I read. I knew to expect some of it, but the characters are even harder to follow than I expected. I‘m pretty much just letting the perspective of the city wash over me and accepting it as it is. 7mo
49 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Villo
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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Mehso-so

Impressive the way the book is written: a style that for being written a century ago is very impressive...but not very easy to get through the end. All these stories crossing each other back and forth make New Your look like a little village where everybody knows everybody, rich and poor and despised. #2020

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writerlibrarian
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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Written in 1925, translated in French in 1928, it still is as interesting and vibrant as it was then. New York shines through all the pages. Dark and light, how the richs live and how the poors die. How one survives and how your life becomes filled with shades of grey. #winterwonderland #theboxer

"I am leaving, I am leaving"
“But the fighter still remains, mmm mmm“

https://vimeo.com/154174150

@Cinfhen
@TrishB

gradcat Nice pic! 👍😍❤️ 5y
TrishB Great post and graphic 👍🏻 5y
Cinfhen Sounds really good!!! 5y
Cinfhen I love the image of Bloomingdales 🙌🏻💕 5y
Leftcoastzen Love USA trilogy! 5y
49 likes2 stack adds5 comments
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heylaurenmack
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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#friyayintro
1. Red
2. Season 4 of Bosch
3. Tagged book! Manhattan Transfer was my senior seminar in college.
4. Cheese, pickles, lettuce, tomato, onions. DOUBLE PATTY THO.
5. Work, work, work, little bit of video games.

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writerlibrarian
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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I'm not a classics purist. Far from it but these two are so much more than classics to me. They are interesting, vibrant portraits of early 20th century New York that we can related to. Time moves on but people and society change slowly. #emojinov #💋

batsy The tagged book sounds great! (I don't need to be convinced to read more Wharton 😉) 6y
38 likes1 stack add1 comment
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BarbaraBB
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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Panpan

This is the story of New York City. Some persons are playing a role in its story, but most of all it is about the city becoming a major one. People from all over the world arrive by boat in search of a better life. Some succeed, the ones who see and grab opportunities, some don't.
I got the picture halfway through and have to admit I only skimmed the second half. #1001books Picture: Rijksmuseum Amsterdam

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writerlibrarian
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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Pickpick

It reads like a movie but the good kind. It doesn't really have a plot instead it follows the lives of a few characters throughout the years in early 1900, through WW1 and right before the 1929 crash but you can feel it coming. New York shines through all the pages. Dark and light, how the richs live and how the poors die. How one survives and how your life becomes filled with shades of grey. #newyorkfiction #marchintoreading #5⭐️

28 likes2 stack adds
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ViridianGirl
Manhattan Transfer: A Novel | John Dos Passos
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I love it when friends recommend good books -

1 like1 stack add