The Barbizon by Paulina Bren audiobook

The Barbizon: The Hotel That Set Women Free

By Paulina Bren
Read by Andi Arndt

Simon & Schuster Audio 9781982123895

Unabridged

Format : Retail CD (In Stock)
  • $39.99

    ISBN: 9781797119946

Runtime: 9.35 Hours
Category: Nonfiction/History
Audience: Adult
Language: English

Summary

Summary

A #1 Amazon bestseller

A New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice of the Week

A “captivating portrait” (The Wall Street Journal), both “poignant and intriguing” (The New Republic): from award-winning author Paulina Bren comes the remarkable history of New York’s most famous residential hotel and the women who stayed there, including Grace Kelly, Sylvia Plath, and Joan Didion.

Welcome to New York’s legendary hotel for women, the Barbizon.

Liberated after WWI from home and hearth, women flocked to New York City during the Roaring Twenties. But even as women’s residential hotels became the fashion, the Barbizon stood out; it was designed for young women with artistic aspirations, and included soaring art studios and soundproofed practice rooms. More importantly still, with no men allowed beyond the lobby, the Barbizon signaled respectability, a place where a young woman of a certain class could feel at home.

But as the stock market crashed and the Great Depression set in, the clientele changed, though women’s ambitions did not; the Barbizon Hotel became the go-to destination for any young American woman with a dream to be something more. While Sylvia Plath most famously fictionalized her time there in The Bell Jar, the Barbizon was also where Titanic survivor Molly Brown sang her last aria; where Grace Kelly danced topless in the hallways; where Joan Didion got her first taste of Manhattan; and where both Ali MacGraw and Jaclyn Smith found their calling as actresses. Students of the prestigious Katharine Gibbs Secretarial School had three floors to themselves, Eileen Ford used the hotel as a guest house for her youngest models, and Mademoiselle magazine boarded its summer interns there, including a young designer named Betsey Johnson.

The first ever history of this extraordinary hotel, and of the women who arrived in New York City alone from “elsewhere” with a suitcase and a dream, The Barbizon offers readers a multilayered history of New York City in the 20th century, and of the generations of American women torn between their desire for independence and their looming social expiration date. By providing women a room of their own, the Barbizon was the hotel that set them free.

Editorial Reviews

Editorial Reviews

“In this captivating portrait, the hotel comes alive again as an enchanted site of a bygone era.” Wall Street Journal
“A fascinating look at a piece of forgotten female history.” Sunday Times (London)
“Bren’s savvy account…doubles as a cultural history of female ambition in the twentieth century.” New York Times Book Review
“An absorbing history of labor and women’s rights in one of the country’s largest cities and also of the places that those women left behind to chase their dreams.” New Yorker
“Packed with juicy midcentury gossip; it’s also full of lesser-known characters who light up the pages…Serves as a potent reminder of how important a little space can be in the quest for freedom.” Bust
“A must read for anyone interested in the history of twentieth-century women’s lives, fashion, publishing, and New York.” Library Journal (starred review)
“From high-heel tapping and typewriter clacking to sinuous and reflective passages analyzing the complex forms of adversity Barbizon women faced over the decades…Engrossing and illuminating.” Booklist (starred review)
The Barbizon is a fascinating social history of a forgotten place and time and an intimate portrait of women, trying to find their way in a pre-feminist world. I’ll never look at a hotel and think the same way again.” Keith O’Brien, New York Times bestselling author

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Author

Author Bio: Paulina Bren

Author Bio: Paulina Bren

Paulina Bren is an award-winning historian and a professor at Vassar College in New York, where she teaches international studies, gender, and media. She is the author of a prizewinning book about soap operas and communism behind the Iron Curtain and a coeditor of a collection on consumerism in the Eastern Bloc. She was born in the former Czechoslovakia and attended Wesleyan University as an undergraduate, later receiving an MA degree in international studies from the University of Washington and a PhD in history from New York University. She has held a host of research grants and fellowships, including residencies in Berlin, Vienna, Budapest, and Atlanta.

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Details

Details

Available Formats : Retail CD
Category: Nonfiction/History
Runtime: 9.35
Audience: Adult
Language: English