MY FORMER BEDROOM:
BEFORE: "The artist and interior designer Richard Lee hand-painted flowers on my bedroom wall and designed and painted the upholstered headboard."
AFTER: "I took that headboard and the striped curtains with me."
I never would have left. I'd always thought that I'd be carried out feet first down that polished wood stairwell with its Arts and Crafts wallpaper. For 27 years, I had lived in this two-bedroom on the second floor of an 1854 brownstone on West 9th Street in Greenwich Village. I wrote three books there and churned out more magazine stories than I can count. I loved to give small parties where I would announce that tray tables had to come down when dinner was served (airplane joke); I never had a proper dining table. Instead, I found huge vintage linen napkins that would spill over to the floor when a plate or small tray was placed on a guest’s lap. I had a fire going all winter— until, about five years ago, I was told I wasn’t allowed to use the fireplace anymore— and in summer I placed a big batch of shells in the hearth. I looked out over a garden with a magnificent ginkgo tree.
And then one day last spring, I got an email informing me that the building was being put on the market. Which meant that unless I could get my hands on millions of dollars to buy the whole thing myself, I was going to have to go.
MY FORMER LIVING ROOM:
Before: "This is where I had my dinner parties, with a Bernard Lamotte painting by the window and a painting by my mother in front of the fireplace, which I was told to stop using about five years ago."
After: "The custom bookshelves that I left behind."
This story is from the November 21 - December 4, 2022 edition of New York magazine.
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This story is from the November 21 - December 4, 2022 edition of New York magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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