Publication Date: October 25, 2021
An Anthology and Celebration of the Big Apple
I’m an unabashed, unapologetic lover of New York City, my hometown, and New York: Give Me Your Best or Your Worst is right up my dark, deserted alley. New York’s at its best when you sneak up on it, glance at its sideways, or let it glance sideways at you. The pros and photos in this collection all show New York’s best, even when they purport to be showing its worst; in NYC, that’s how we roll. A fine addition to your New York bookshelf, a collection to savor.
~ SJ Rozen, best-selling author of The Art of Violence
Writer and photographer, Elizabeth Crowens is one of 500 New York City-based artists to receive funding through the City Artist Corps Grants program, presented by The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA), with support from the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment (MOME) as well as Queens Theatre.
She was recognized for New York: Give Me Your Best or Your Worst, her photo-illustrated anthology, which brought her published book along with ten other authors to Mysterious Bookshop in Lower Manhattan at 58 Warren Street on Monday, October 25, 2021 for an in-store event and author signing along with a simultaneous Facebook Live presentation and recording for Jim Freund’s WBAI program Hour of the Wolf.
Originally conceived from a series of Facebook posts called “Caption Contest: Give Me Your Best and Worst,” novelist and photographer Elizabeth Crowens has curated a series of provocative, entertaining, and moving vignettes of New York City, flashes of lofty dreams and the nightmares of reality, nostalgic windows into the past and jolting visions of the future, as well as light and amusing escapes into the imaginations of the authors and photographers who call the city home.
The stories and poems are interspersed between photographs of the city and its inhabitants, and the stories and voices are diverse, engaging, and sometimes a little chaotic, just like the city itself. Reed Farrel Coleman’s sonnet, “City Once Known,” is shrouded in shadows of his memories and longing, which bounces as rhythmically as the waves crashing under the boardwalk. Richie Narvaez’s touching reflections on opportunity and innocence contrasts with the reality of police and domestic violence, celebrating resilience that regretabily exists with these polarities. Charles Salzberg’s comically tragic experience in being pushed out of his Manhattan apartment by developers balances perfectly between the personal and the global shifts in real estate. And in a similar vein, Steven Van Patten’s over-the-top comedic-horror story doesn’t allow you to simply laugh off the real challenges of gentrification and microaggressions that continue at the workplace.
And while there are a fair share of stories of sci-fi and fantasy—fighting skeletons, alien visitors, and Machiavelian dogs—the authors never shy away from deeper human concerns. For instance, in Barbara Krasnoff’s “The Fishmonger,” we follow Sam, the fish vendor who speaks to his fish rather than to his customers. As soon as his customers—some disgruntled and others deeply worried for his health—leave the store, the fish come to life and join in with the conversation. Though it’s not clear if this is real or imagined by Sam, the conversation totters between levity and seriousness, as the salmon recounts his experience of living it up in the ocean, eating well and fighting the urge to go back to freshwater to mate, only to be caught and brought to Sam’s store. Krasnoff seems to be having us reflect on the nets that exist, regardless of the choices we make, that can weigh us down or provide opportunity, as Sam decides to go to the party he was invited to by one of his customers.
The photographs themselves, some thematically connected to the stories and some not, capture the intimacy between friends and lovers, the strangeness of tabloids and billboards, the blurriness of time and the stillness of memories. In Reed Farrell’s forward, he mentions that New York City “is fated to be a place of stark contradictions: of churning and yearning, of inclusion and exclusion, of acceptance and denial,” and the photographs encapsulate this contrast stunningly. The cityscapes emphasise the glitzy reflections off the buildings and the twinkling lights at night, while also including drab, cracked concrete and overflowing garbage cans. The portraits highlight the joy and excitement of children playing, alongside apprehensive glances and weary faces. And most moving for me was the interplay between the natural and the artificial, showing the resilience of flowers and trees among the artificial, but also the coexistence of humanity within these spaces, like people sitting on a park bench in the snow.
Though some photographs do seem taken directly from a Facebook page, yielding not as much artistic depth as the others, Crowens may be arguing that the quick snapshots of ComicCon or random signs and antique store artifacts hold similar value—the desultory and the amateurish should exist alongside the well-crafted and poignant.
And as the book ends with a series of burning sunsets, some peeking through the narrow buildings and others reflected on windows, you’re alongside the crowd at a stand-still, absorbing what you’ve just seen but also understanding that, like all great cities, the cyclical contrasts will continue to exist, even after you close the book.
- Called a hard-boiled poet by NPR’s Maureen Corrigan and the noir poet laureate in the Huffington Post, Reed Farrel Coleman is the New York Times bestselling author of thirty-one novels including six in the Jesse Stone series for the estate of Robert B. Parker. He is a four-time recipient of the Shamus Award for Best PI Novel of the Year, a two-time Thriller Award nominee, and a four-time Edgar Award nominee in three different categories. He has also received the Scribe, Audie, Macavity, Barry, and Anthony Awards. His latest novel, Sleepless City for Blackstone Publishing will be in stores in early 2022.
- Charles Salzberg, former magazine journalist, crime novelist of the Shamus Award-nominated Henry Swann series, founding member of the New York Writers Workshop.
- Tom Straw, Emmy and WGA-nominated writer-producer, credits include Nurse Jackie, Night Court, Grace Under Fire, Whoopie, and the Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. Crime novelist under the pen name of Richard Castle.
- Randee Dawn, Entertainment journalist for Today.com, Variety, and the Los Angeles Times. Co-editor of Across the Universe: Tales of Alternative Beatles and The Law & Order: SUV Companion, and speculative fiction writer of the upcoming Tune in Tomorrow.
- Barbara Krasnoff, Reviews Editor at The Verge, over 45 published short stories, Nebula Award finalist, author of the “mosaic” novel The History of Soul 2065.
- Steven Van Patten, TV stage manager by day, horror writer by night. Co-host of the Beef, Wine and Shenanigans podcast, winner of several African American Literary Awards.
- Triss Stein writes mysteries that all take place in Brooklyn.
- Marco Conelli, former NYPD detective, consultant to Mary Higgins Clark, and Silver Falchion award-winner for young adult mysteries and the police procedural Cry For Help, taking place in The Bronx.
- R.J. Koreto, historical mystery writer focusing on New York during the Gilded Age.
- Richie Narvaez, award-winning mystery author of Hipster Death Rattle, Holly Hernandez and the Death of Disco, and Noiryorican.
- Elizabeth Crowens, over 25 years in the entertainment industry, member of the International Cinematographers Guild as a Still Photographer (Imdb.com credited: Sheri Lane), award-winning writer of novels in the Hollywood mystery and alternate history genres. Recipient of the Leo B. Burstein Scholarship by the NY Chapter of Mystery Writers of America. Editor and photographer for New York: Give Me Your Best or Your Worst based on her Facebook Caption Contests. elizabethcrowens.com, @Ecrowens on Twitter, and Elizabeth Crowens on Facebook!
Thanks for the review. I loved this book and had so much fun reading through and looking at the photos.
You’re welcome! I was really excited to read the review myself!