"One Fifth Avenue" by Candace Bushnell
69What It's Like to Live in the Best Building in New York City
A really incisive book from Candace Bushnell is One Fifth Avenue,
published in 2008. It’s a story about One Fifth Avenue address in New
York and its glamorous (or not so) tenants. Fifth Avenue is THE street
in Manhattan – the street of rich, the street of powerful, the street of
those who are on top. And One Fifth Avenue is THE address – the most
coveted, the most craved, the most desired, the chicest, the hottest,
the one with the best pedigree, the one with all the most interesting
people. If you live on One Fifth Avenue, you really made it.
The intrigues at One Fifth Avenue are tangled by its tenants themselves.
Philip Oakland, a writer. Enid Merle, his aunt, a gossip columnist.
Schiffer Diamond, a Hollywood actress. James and Mindy Gooch, a writer
and a journalist. Annalisa and Paul Rice, a lawyer and a businessman.
And of course, Lola Fabrikant, the One Fifth Avenue tenant wannabe.
Once Mrs. Houghton, the old social queen of New York, is dead, the
battle for her penthouse apartment at One Fifth Avenue is on. It’s won
by the Rice couple, rich people from Washington. Once they move in, the
conflict between the building tenants is going to be more tense than
ever. Everybody is craving for Mrs. Houghton’s luxurious penthouse
apartment from One Fifth Avenue, but not everybody can actually afford
it, hence the tensions between the building tenants. Mindy Gooch is the
one to suffer the most from the tenant changes in the building, because
she is frustrated by living in the best building in the city, but by occupying the worst apartment in it, an apartment on the main floor
which used to be a storage space before it was upgraded to a living
apartment. So she constantly badgers her husband James about their
living conditions; about buying a better apartment in the building which
they can’t actually afford because they are just a middle class couple;
about his books which aren’t exactly on the bestselling list; about
their marriage which is far from perfect as well, and so on.
Another hilarious character, so Candace Bushnell-esque, is Lola
Fabrikant, the One Fifth Avenue tenant wannabe, and Philip Oakland’s
girlfriend wannabe as well. Lola, a young but ambitious girl, comes to
New York “to make her life”. She manages to get hired by Philip Oakland,
and soon after that she manages to seduce him, calling herself his
girlfriend. If it seems to you that she’s a stupid girl, don’t be
fooled. She may not know any serious things about life, she may not know
what hard and honest work means, she may not have ever tried to do
something notable in her life by herself, but she knows perfectly what
she wants, and she always finds a way to get it. And what does she want?
Nothing special – just a nice place like One Fifth Avenue to live, and a
nice man like Philip Oakland to pay for her expenses. Things are going
according to her plan for a while, while Philip is caught in this
relationship “by default”. But once Phillip disentangles himself from Lola
and gets engaged to love of his life Schiffer Diamond, Lola quickly
finds another man to pay her bills – James Gooch, who suddenly does
become a best-selling writer and gets rich overnight. Lola Fabrikant is
one of Candace Bushnell’s characters often met in her books – women who
don’t want to move a finger to do anything decent in their lives, but
who want to fool some rich man to provide for them.
Fake marriages are also present in this book, just like in other books
by Candace Bushnell. It’s surprising how two people who have nothing in
common get married and manage to live together for years, just to reach to
a point when they practically hate each other. One of these couples is
Mindy and James Gooch. Although they have had a long marriage, although
they have a teenage boy, they act like total strangers. More than that –
they hate each other. Mindy hates her husband for not being a
successful writer, for not being a multi-millionaire, and for not being
able to afford a more expensive apartment in their building; while James
hates Mindy for not being a supportive wife and for always
underestimating and undermining him.
Another fake marriage is that of Annalisa and Paul Rice. They are the
rich couple who manage to snatch the coveted penthouse apartment from
One Fifth; but what they can’t manage to do is to get beyond their money
and their banking accounts. Their marriage goes from fake to dangerous;
thoughts of killing spouse cross their minds; and so, Annalisa finds a
way to get rid of her husband who started to step on her toes.
Once again, Candace Bushnell serves us a sharp and outrageous book about
New York people and their social habits. One of these habits is that
everyone is a writer, or a writer wannabe. Philip Oakland and James
Gooch are, of course, credited writers. But there are lots of other
writers in this book. Enid Merle, Philip’s aunt, is a gossip columnist.
Mindi Gooch works in Publishing and writes a blog about her frustrating
life. Thayer, a friend of Lola's, is a blogger who writes a very popular
blog about social events and people from new York. Even Lola Fabrikant
fancies herself as a writer at some point and starts to write a sex
column on a blog. An inflation of writers in New York City.
And One Fifth Avenue is not the only book by Candace Bushnell
abounding with writers or writer wannabes. First of all, her consecrated
character Carrie Bradshaw from Sex and the City and The
Carrie Diaries is a writer. Then Janey Wilcox from Four Blondes
and Trading Up comes along, attempting “to be a writer” and
trying to write a movie script. Either she finishes it or not, that’s
another issue. Then the other blondes from Four Blondes write as
well – the journalist Winnie Deeke and the writer Minky. Lots and lots
of writers in Candace Bushnell’s book, literally an invasion of writers.
Some of them are real writers all right, like Carrie Bradshaw for
instance, but how about the others? While reading Candace Bushnell’s
books, I couldn’t help but wonder – does everybody in New York aspire to
be a writer?
Read One Fifth Avenue by Candace Bushnell, and you’ll have real
fun – it’s a great page turner.
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i have read the preview of this book, and am dying to read the book, as usual am expecting the 'MOVIE". thumbs up
guys,i live in Romania and i saw this book 3 weeks ago! i bought it for the christmas and in 2 days i'll finish it..it's the best i ever read!!! wow,i love it
i bought this book 4 days ago, i'm lovin it.i am latin and i'm learning abt new yorkers life. great book. thanks for sharing ur thoughts




billyaustindillon Level 2 Commenter 23 months ago
This sounds like a must read for understanding the 'fakery' around fifth avenue and having a good laugh at the same time.