corner corner Philistines at the Hedgerow : Passion and Property in the Hamptons

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Philistines at the Hedgerow : Passion and Property in the Hamptons
by Steven Gaines | Literature & Fiction
Registered by LastEdition on Friday, July 14, 2006
This book has not been rated. 

status (set by LastEdition): permanent collection


1 journaler for this copy...

Journal Entry 1 by LastEdition on Friday, July 14, 2006

This book has not been rated.

From Publishers Weekly
Even those who have never heard of Long Island's home to the super-rich and the celebrated (Calvin and Kelly Klein, Steven Spielberg, Martha Stewart, Alec Baldwin and wife Kim Basinger, to name only a few) will find page-turning entertainment in this social history of the Hamptons. In 1635, Lion Gardiner made a pact with Wyandanch, the great sachem of the Montauk, to keep the marauding Connecticut Pequots from infiltrating Long Island, and he received a sack of five Pequot heads to seal the agreement. From that time forward, the Hamptons have hosted a melange of old society and new money, often an uneasy blending. At the turn of the century, wealthy artists Albert and Adele Herter built the legendary Mediterranean villa, "The Creeks"; a caretaker poled Adele about Georgica Pond to visit friends in a gondola bought from poet Robert Browning. When operating costs depleted their fortune and Adele, without a laundress, discovered that it took an hour to iron her nightgown, she decided to sleep in her bloomers. In 1990, billionaire Ronald Perlman purchased The Creeks for the bargain price of $12.5 million. In the booming 1980s, to own property in the Hamptons was the signal that one had arrived; it was said that "if you have to work on Fridays in the summer or be back in the office on Monday morning, you're not successful enough to live there." Gaines (Obsession, a biography of Calvin Klein) depicts a fabulous cast of real-life characters, both high and low. More fun than most fiction, this is a terrific summer or anytime read. 


Journal Entry 2 by LastEdition on Tuesday, August 29, 2006

This book has not been rated.

I really enjoyed this book. If this was TV it would be a drama-documentary and be seen y a lot of people, I suspect.
Quite by chance I pulled Mark Mills Amagansett (The Whaleboat House) off my shelf to read - a perfect transition I hope.
 




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