“An epic tale,” says the Hartford Courant. “Fascinating.”
“The story of New York’s most exclusive residential building is anything but simple. It took a reporter and storyteller like Michael Gross to lay out the epic tale – truly, the story of American capitalism and 20th-century New York society – that is 740 Park Ave. The result is a fascinating glimpse inside the walls […]
A “great read,” raves People
“A gossipy history of Manhattan’s most luxurious co-op, with revealing tales about tenants including Jackie Onassis and John D.Rockefeller, Jr.” — People, November 14, 2005
A “Window on Aristocracy,” says the New York Sun
New York’s luxury apartment industry seems to have gotten its own Bosell in Michael Gross, best-selling author and chronicler of society.
740 Park Causes Controversy
Ben Widdicombe’s Gatecrasher column in the Daily News says 740 Park is causing controversy at amazon.com.
“The secrets of the moneyed classes.” — New York Times
Today, The New York Times’ Boldface crew looks back at last week’s 740 Park launch party at Lotus (see second item), and catches a whiff of something… pungent.
“A history of the American aristocracy.” — New York Post
The New York Post interviews 740 Park author Michael Gross on “NYC’s toniest digs.” Click here to read it.
“Shocking and sometimes tragic,” says Star
“740 Park is the home of some of the world’s wealthiest people. Gross takes readers inside its doorman-protected walls, exposing the shocking and sometimes tragic secrets the building has been guarding for nearly a century.” — Star, October 31, 2005
Galleycat regrets
The folks at mediabistro’s galleycat couldn’t make it to Lotus, but they had their say anyway.
Lotus rocks for 740 Park
Christine Mortimer Biddle, Quintessentially’s Ben Elliot, Radar editor Maer Roshan, Tiffany Dubin, Bergdorf Goodman’s Robert Burke and Peter Gethers of Random House hosted a wild night at Lotus celebrating the publication of 740 Park. See photos of the revelers — including Justin Theroux, Nicole Miller, Denise Hale, Sue Newhouse, Mario Buatta, Douglas Cramer, Janis Savitt, […]
Books that take no prisoners
The Week invites 740 Park author Michael Gross to name his six favorite books.