Read Love Saves the Day Online
Authors: Gwen Cooper
Whether or not the building was in danger of imminent collapse is a question still hotly debated. Witnesses say that it had to be leveled to the ground over a thirteen-hour period and never collapsed on its own. Today, luxury condominiums occupy the site.
The events portrayed in
chapter 13
of this book, while inspired by eyewitness accounts and newspaper articles about what happened that day, are a fictional creation and not intended to accurately depict real events. The characters in this book are also fictional creations and do not represent any actual persons who
occupied 172 Stanton in 1998 or at any time in the building’s history.
There was, however, a real “Honey the cat.” Honey was one of two cats and a parrot living in the building on the day it was demolished, whose owners were not allowed to retrieve them. Neither the cats nor the parrot were ever seen again.
For Scarlett, the original Prudence
For Homer, the Original
For Vashti, sweeter than Honey
And for Laurence, always
This book would not have been possible without these books:
Alphabet City
, Geoffrey Biddle
Last Night a DJ Saved My Life
, Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton
Alphaville: 1988, Crime, Punishment, and the Battle for New York City’s Lower East Side
, Michael Codella and Bruce Bennett
Street Play
, Martha Cooper
Blackout Looting!
, Robert Curvin and Bruce Porter
Hot Stuff: Disco and the Remaking of American Culture
, Alice Echols
All Hopped Up and Ready to Go: Music from the Streets of New York, 1927–1977
, Tony Fletcher
Making Tracks: The Rise of Blondie
, Debbie Harry, Chris Stein, and Victor Bockris
Love Saves the Day: A History of American Dance Music Culture, 1970–1979
, Tim Lawrence
Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk
, Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain
Resistance: A Radical Social and Political History of the Lower East Side
, Clayton Patterson and Jeff Ferrell
Tompkins Square Park
, Q. Sakamaki
New York Rocker
, Gary Valentine
Naked City: The Death and Life of Authentic Urban Places
, Sharon Zukin
As well as the newspaper article:
Andrew Jacobs, “The Angry Urban Refugees,”
The New York Times
, May 10, 1998
This book would also have been impossible without the following people who allowed me to interview them about motherhood, music, record stores, lily toxicity in cats, life in a law firm, Mitchell-Lama housing, and everyday life in and around the Lower East Side in the ’70s and ’80s: Dr. Tracy DeMeola, Richard Finkelstein, Jim Kiick, John Kioussis, Andrea Kline, Manny Maris, Lorcan Otway, Clayton Patterson, Binky Philips, Dee Pop, Tony Sachs, Jay Wilson, and several female attorneys who wish to remain anonymous.
And, last but not least, my deepest gratitude goes to:
Michele Rubin, superagent and “author whisperer.” My editors Caitlin Alexander—the first person to fall in love with Prudence—and Kate Miciak, who offered far more patience than I deserved as I raced to cross the finish line, and whose insights and feedback made this book better than it has any right to be.
Anise “Anise’s to Pieces” Labrum, for ten years of true friendship and crazy stories better than any I could have made up, for flying from Napa to New York a week before my wedding—with a broken arm!—to sew my wedding dress, and for allowing me such free use of her name, talents, and persona.
Peri Stedman, the woman at whose thirtieth birthday party I was introduced to one Laurence Lerman. I told you I’d work your name into the next book I wrote!
David and Claire Berkowitz, my grandparents and the inspiration
for the Mandelbaums. I was lucky enough to have my grandmother living with us for twelve years of my childhood, telling me stories she probably doubted I’d remember. God was very good to me when he gave me two mothers.
David and Barbara Cooper, my parents and the greatest cheering section any daughter who wanted to be a writer could have asked for.
Laurence Lerman, the world’s best husband and my first editor, who read (and then re-read, and then re-re-read) every word of this book as I wrote it, whose brilliant suggestions occasionally made me wonder if I should turn the writing over to him, and who put up with me during the many, many months when I was utterly unbearable. Also Ben and Saundra Lerman. Nobody ever had better parents-in-law.
Melanie Paradise, a great friend, greater cat guardian, and this book’s first reader aside from my husband and editors.
Rhoda Palmateer, in loving memory. Rhoda’s love saved the day for many hundreds of cats and kittens who otherwise would have languished on the streets or died in shelters. Your extraordinary heart will always be missed.
Everybody who read
Homer’s Odyssey
, took the time to email me, followed Homer and me on Facebook and Twitter, and whose daily encouragement kept me going when I was positive I wouldn’t be able to finish this book.
And, finally, Clayton and Fanny Cooper-Lerman—the most adorable kittens ever (aside from Homer, Vashti, and Scarlett, of course)—for the frequent and necessary laughter breaks during the last few weeks of writing.
BY GWEN COOPER
Love Saves the Day
Homer’s Odyssey
Diary of a South Beach Party Girl
G
WEN
C
OOPER
is the
New York Times
bestselling author of the memoir
Homer’s Odyssey: A Fearless Feline Tale, or How I Learned About Love and Life with a Blind Wonder Cat
and the novel
Diary of a South Beach Party Girl
. She is active with numerous animal welfare organizations. Gwen Cooper lives in Manhattan with her husband, Laurence. She also lives with her three perfect cats—Homer, Clayton, and Fanny—who aren’t impressed with any of it.