Day 15. Pablo Neruda | Day 16: "Rain" by Raymond Carver | Day 17: Christopher Poindexter | Day 18: Allen Ginsberg | Day 19: Shel Silverstein | Day 20: Robert Frost | Day 21: "Don't Hesitate" by Mary Oliver
National Poetry Month: Part 2
Day 8: A reminder from Wordsworth | Day 9: Advice to Writers by Billy Collins | Day 10: Tennyson for spring | Day 11: How I Go to the Woods by Mary Oliver | Day 12: Mela by Barry Spacks | Day 13: Fog by Carl Sandburg | Day 14: This Morning I Could Do A Thousand Things by Robert Hedin
Literary City Guide: Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn
Photo by Max Flatow
“Look at everything always as though you were seeing it either for the first or last time: Thus is your time on earth filled with glory.”
― Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
I love this quote because it reminds me that approaching familiar streets with fresh eyes can reveal their beauty and charm, even if you've lived nearby your entire life. It's especially fitting for today's addition to Literary City Guides, because tour guide Sylvie Morgan Brown is a Brooklyn native who knows Carroll Gardens like the back of her hand. Also, anyone who recommends an Italian restaurant that serves fluffy, fried chickpea fritters smeared with ricotta is trustworthy in my book!
In a city as large as New York, neighborhood tours make a big, overwhelming metropolis feel more accessible and familiar. Our first was Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and today Carroll Gardens debuts. (Basically, you need to be exploring Brooklyn if you aren't already.)
Carroll Gardens has all the trappings of an idyllic neighborhood, like an old-fashioned soda shop where the wait-staff wears paper hats, tree-lined streets, and and several bookstores to get lost in, so stop by to welcome our latest edition to Literary City Guides!