esquared

ee-- those are my initials
a polite New Yorker you'll never meet.

Living my life in contradiction in New York, New York
-- a city that is so nice gentrified, they named it twice.

e-mail: e2the2ndpwr[at]gmail[dot]com

“I think I meant it more as an indictment of American life in the 1950s. Because during the Fifties there was a general lust for conformity all over this country, by no means only in the suburbs — a kind of blind, desperate clinging to safety and security at any price, as exemplified politically in the Eisenhower administration and the Joe McCarthy witchhunts. Anyway, a great many Americans were deeply disturbed by all that — felt it to be an outright betrayal of our best and bravest revolutionary spirit — and that was the spirit I tried to embody in the character of April Wheeler. I meant the title to suggest that the revolutionary road of 1776 had come to something very much like a dead end in the Fifties.”

~ Richad Yates from Henry, DeWitt and Clark, Geoffrey. “An Interview with Richard Yates,” Ploughshares, Winter, 1972.

(Replace Eisenhower with Bloomberg and this is pretty much what his administration has done to NYC— suburbinization and the lust for conformity)

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