When I was living in New York in the 1980s, my friend Michael introduced me to the Gallery Girls, two of his friends that were part of the city's art scene. It was hard not be part of it, even for someone who still secretly felt shamed by the "Bridge and Tunnel" label given to someone who grew up in an outer borough like Queens. Working at a publishing house and still being connected to friends from college, you'd get invited to various openings, and our work ID got into a lot of museums, like MOMA, which were otherwise quite expensive for a publicity assistant.
I could only imagine what life was like as an artist. I took a painting class in summer school where my greatest work was a portrait of Wilma Flintstone, with Fred looking on from a distance. There's a slot for that sort of thing nowadays but at the time it was just seen as immature, and it's true that I really, really, really liked the Flintstones. I looked for the painting, which I had stored in my parent's basement, but alas, my dad had tossed it some years before.
And then in college, I took one studio art class from Professor Boghosian, sort of a last desperate attempt at being visually creative. I remember one project where we colored in maps to hone our design sense. Instead of complimenting my work, he would instead quiz me about Joseph Cornell, and whether I had lived near his home studio on Utopia Parkway. It turned out that the answer was no, but he was pretty close to my pediatrician, who, due to a years-long regimen of allergy shots, was a regular visit. But that class did not reveal any innate talents that lay dormant. Hey, my professor has a Wikipedia entry!
So there I was at the BEA (Book Expo) convention last spring, piling up books to read, excited about what is to come. I had already had that HarperCollins visit where I was shown The Nest, and now I was meeting my friend at Simon and Schuster, Wendy, for breakfast. Wendy is a former bookseller, and in fact, the first time I met her was just after she learned her bookstore was closing. I later went though that transition myself and now we are in a good place - she tells me what to read and when I can, I read it. It was on that morning that I discovered that New York was obsessed with avocado toast. Until then, I was oblivious.
She handed me a bound manuscript, knowing that it's still pretty impossible to get me to read electronic galleys. The book was Tuesday Nights in 1980, a first novel by Molly Prentiss. As you'll read in my writeup (yes, this is a long introduction, as sometimes I like to ramble on a theme), the book is about an artist, a critic, and a muse, and while at that point, I was getting into galleys, I was certainly wandering the neighborhood, shopping for strangely colored carpenter pants at Canal Jeans, the emporium that is now Bloomingdale's southern outpost and once had a lot of galleries, but have now moved to another neighborhood where there were meat packers and rather raunchy gay bars. I swear, Am I sounding like an elderly crank? Good.
When I read the book, which feels like a long time ago, a copy editor wrote that Idaho was in the Midwest, which I'm sure was long since corrected. Being that in yesterday's newsletter, we spelled Pegi Christiansen's name wrong, and listed the Barbara Rinella Services lunch as benefitting something other than Ozaukee Family Services, I am completely forgiving. Here's another shout out for the brunch, featuring Barbara Rinella as Beryl Markham on May 11.
While Carly is now archiving elsewhere, I am including her review of Tuesday Nights in 1980 as well, which she wrote as a Boswellian. "Gallery shows and creative gatherings mark Tuesday nights in New York City in the year 1980, where artists, critics, observers, and loyal fans join up and celebrate art in the midst of unrelenting gentrification and urban transformation. James Bennett, an oddball art critic with overwhelming synesthesia, and Raul Engales, a young Argentinian exile whose paintings are on the cusp of being discovered, abruptly cross paths when they realize they share a muse, a beautiful girl from Idaho named Lucy who is struggling to make ends meet in the big city. Layered with detailed backstories and cultural references that truly set the 1980s scene, Tuesday Nights in 1980 is an inventive debut that will appeal to art lovers, urban spelunkers, and postmodern readers." (Carly Lenz wrote the review. That's Molly Prentiss's author photo at left - photo credit Elizabeth Leitzell.)Tuesday Nights in 1980 is officially out today, as is a veritable truckload of new titles. It's Boswell's Best for at least the next two weeks. And since I read the book so long ago, I will just note that it has stayed with me a long time, and you know something? I liked it so much that I wouldn't mind reading it again.
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