Courtesy of the Criterion Channel.
Joan Micklin Silver’s romantic comedy Crossing Delancey (1988) opens in a dimly lit bookstore on the Upper East Side. “They want to pull us down and make something clean and tall and obscenely profitable arise out of our ashes,” the bookstore’s owner tells a group of literary luminaries assembled for a fundraiser. “But we are here! . . . New York’s last real bookstore will be around for a good long time.”
Our heroine, Isabelle Grossman (Amy Irving), is an employee of this last real . . .
Subscriber Access Required
This article is available to paid subscribers with digital access.
- Already a subscriber with digital access? Log in here to read the full article.
- Not yet subscribed? Subscribe now for full digital access to all articles and downloadable PDFs.
- Prefer a one-time purchase? Click the “Purchase PDF” button above.
- Institutional user? Recommend LIBER to your institution's library for unlimited access.