Welcome to The Writers Room

The Writers Room, the nation's oldest and largest urban writers' colony, is located in a bright and airy loft at the crossroads of Greenwich Village and the East Village. The Room annually provides more than 300 established and emerging writers the use of quiet, affordable work space.

Roberta Brandes Gratz

The Battle for Gotham: New York in the Shadow of Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs From Publishers Weekly:

The mid-20th-century showdown between New York City planning czar Moses and legendary community urbanist Jacobs reverberates down the decades in this meandering polemic. A journalist and member of New York City’s Landmarks Preservation Commission, Gratz (The Living City) views 50 years of economic and real estate development as a duel between the legacies of Moses, whose pharaonic highway and urban renewal projects obliterated neighborhoods, and Jacobs, who extolled urban diversity and disorderly mixed uses, hated cars, and championed organic, human-scale development. Through this lens, Gratz rehashes Jacobs’s defeat of Moses’s Manhattan expressway schemes, examines New York’s (anti-)industrial policies and historical preservation laws, and attacks what she sees as latter-day boondoggles like Brooklyn’s proposed mammoth Atlantic Yards development and Columbia University’s expansion. The avowedly partisan author despises Moses as %u201Carrogant%u201D and %u201Cracist,%u201D and sometimes cedes the book to Jacobs with lengthy excerpts from interviews with the late urbanist. Gratz offers some cogent critiques of contemporary urban planning (while also embracing a few, like urban farming). Alas, her exposition of Jacobs’s ideas is larded with unfocused autobiography, and far less tightly argued than Jacobs’s own classic writings. B&w photos. (Apr. 1)

Publisher:Avalon Publishing Group; March 2010ISBN 10:1568584385 ISBN 13:9781568584386

Easygoing, but useful, writing workshop.

I hope you’ll consider taking this easygoing, but useful, writing workshop. It’s a good deal for members of the West Side YMCA. Thanks. –Thad Rutkowski, www.thaddeusrutkowski.com

“Generating Fiction” will begin Monday evening, Sept. 13, 2010, at The Writer’s Voice of the West Side YMCA, 5 West 63rd Street. The class will include brief exercises and detailed, constructive criticism of works-in-progress. Stories, novel chapters, creative nonfiction and experimental approaches are welcome. Open to everyone. Ten meetings. Financial aid is available. Registration for non-YMCA members begins Aug. 30. Register in person or online (I can send instructions).

For information (but not to register), call Casey Slone at (212) 912-2634, or e-mail cslone@ymcanyc.org.