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- Xref: sparky rec.arts.books:23418 alt.culture.ny-upstate:218 ny.general:503 capdist.misc:138
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books,alt.culture.ny-upstate,ny.general,capdist.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!rpi!jec310.its.rpi.edu!kasprj
- From: kasprj@jec310.its.rpi.edu (Jim Kasprzak)
- Subject: Down From Troy
- Message-ID: <sz12vw+@rpi.edu>
- Followup-To: rec.arts.books,alt.culture.ny-upstate
- Nntp-Posting-Host: jec310.its.rpi.edu
- Reply-To: kasprj@rpi.edu
- Organization: The Big Wedge
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 14:20:34 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
-
- Shortly after I made my lengthy post on alt.culture.ny-upstate about the
- merits and drawbacks of Troy, I picked up a copy of the newly published
- book _Down From Troy_ by Dr. Richard Selzer. He tells the story of Troy as
- seen through the eyes of an adolescent boy in the 1930's, and while much
- has changed in this lovely pile of bricks by the Hudson River since that
- time, much has also remained the same.
-
- "To Troy, then. Troy! Where in October even the dogs in the street
- pause to admire the foliage. Troy! Unfurling down the hillsides like
- the grayish pink tongue of a spaniel to lap the waters of the Hudson
- River."
-
- Dr. Selzer's book, subtitled "A Doctor Comes of Age", mainly deals with
- the experiences that shaped his life while growing up - what led him to
- become a doctor, and later, an author. But in such a process, Troy is
- revealed as a character second in importance only to Dr. Selzer himself.
- Selzer's Troy was a primarily Irish-Catholic industrial city, a railroad
- junction and important stop on the route from Montreal to New York. My
- Troy is a college town which tries to pretend it isn't one, inhabited
- by Euromix and African-Americans, no longer a very important stop on the
- route to anywhere. Most of the churches and the factories are still there,
- but neither gets much use any more. Still, Selzer saw the richness in his
- Troy just as I do in mine. (He speaks of it more eloquently, though.)
-
- So if you can't bring yourself to visit my Troy, an evening's reading
- will let you visit Richard Selzer's. And some things remain constant
- through both. Oakwood Cemetery and the Gardner Earl Crematorium are as
- haunting and beautiful as ever. And Manory's is still there, and even
- occasionally used as a meeting place between skinny, bookish romantics
- and the beautiful girls whose hearts they will never win.
-
- (Disclaimer, for those weenies who need one: I have no connection with
- Richard Selzer or his publishers, except as a satisfied reader.)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- __ Live from Capitaland, heart of the Empire State...
- ___/ | Jim Kasprzak, computer operator @ RPI, Troy, NY, USA
- /____ *| Sam Adams,Spaten# Life is too short #Hudson Lager,Beck's
- \_| Pilsener Urquell#to drink cheap beer#Pete's Wicked Ale
- ==== e-mail: kasprj@rpi.edu or kasprzak@mts.rpi.edu
-
-
-