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We
Used to Own the Bronx
We Used to Own the Bronx tells
the story of a woman born into the proprieties of an East Coast
dynasty who nevertheless leaves her world of privilege for a
career as an investigative reporter. Recounting her upbringing,
Eve Pell offers an inside look at the bizarre values and customs
of the American aristocracy, from debutante balls and the
belowstairs hierarchy of the servant class to the fanatical
pursuit of blood sports and private men’s clubs whose members
were cared for like sultans. In the patriarchal world of the
upper crust, girls were expected to flatter and defer to boys
and men: her scholar-athlete sister was offered a racehorse if
she would refuse to attend college. A parade of eccentrics
populates the book, from the cockfighting stepfather who ran
away from boarding school with a false beard and a stolen
motorcycle to the Brahmin great-uncle who secretly organized the
servants in Tuxedo Park to vote for Teddy Roosevelt.
But as she moved beyond the narrow world she was expected to
inhabit, Pell encountered people and ideas that brought her into
conflict with her past. Equally unconventional are the
muckrakers and revolutionaries she met in the 1960s and 1970s,
and her subsequent adventures and misadventures while working
with radical activists to reform the California prison system.
As Pell traces her absorbing journey from debutante to working
mother, from the upper crust of the East Coast to the radical
activists of the West, from a life of wealth and privilege to
one of trying to make ends meet, she provides exceptional
insight into the prickly and complex issues of social class in
America. |