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(AGENPARL) – mer 12 ottobre 2022 [https://files.constantcontact.com/b6dbc81b001/d41902a7-fc68-4eda-9f64-e867312eade3.jpg?rdr=true](https://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001gbgy9KZ7qDMS-xvOJJrf_KEGrPv06Sq6–yWa2JpY_9aquMRkBP_NSpy6Wf3ZxMk3Ds2NnbOrK7PThqbM_j072tmElFUCTrRgDrY1rkHxrRwlqd8qF2gwzWtZPBs5RGjx_Z-pbRGDxqSAhNaL4wdIwM1Gsr902G9&c=P04xF507jEZ0GrNMwmQcxffNHhl-kKNPSAkxWrB3GxsQMpOrNhwE3g==&ch=qWnrKtSc0zOqgrBSpvLG1Pw2gvgDCkpFU5F5G4wAWfN0NpkudhAvSA==)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
South Street Seaport Museum
In Partnership with McNally Jackson Books
Announces
October Book Club: Up in the Old Hotel by Joseph Mitchell
October 24, 2022
South Street Seaport Museum announces that the October selection of the Seaport Museum Book Club isUp in the Old Hotel by Joseph Mitchell. This new, maritime-themed book club is presented in partnership with McNally Jackson Books. Literary selections will be announced one month in advance, and both Seaport Museum staff and special guests will stir up lively discussions, informed by a shared love of literature, history, and preservation.
The October session of the Seaport Museum Book Club will feature a conversation on Up in the Old Hotel by Joseph Mitchell Older on Monday, October 24, 2022 at 5:30pm at McNally Jackson Books at 4 Fulton Street, just a few doors down from the Museum. For more information and to register for this free, all-ages event, visit [seaportmuseum.org/bookclub](https://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001gbgy9KZ7qDMS-xvOJJrf_KEGrPv06Sq6–yWa2JpY_9aquMRkBP_NX-4riEGB8Xvx3vn_adywRt8epx87qqQWiaV6FYcl_ixtHkWZipz6EtL4MiYXSV3Yw0_u6zallsGk-tMfmECxzjiH9dvm0jn_SXTLCUVkXLvbcsmOLqTAbwZ2B8EwJ3itg==&c=P04xF507jEZ0GrNMwmQcxffNHhl-kKNPSAkxWrB3GxsQMpOrNhwE3g==&ch=qWnrKtSc0zOqgrBSpvLG1Pw2gvgDCkpFU5F5G4wAWfN0NpkudhAvSA==).
About Up in the Old Hotel
The upper floors of Schermerhorn Row, a New York City Landmark, located within the National Register-listed South Street Seaport Historic District, include architectural remnants of the building’s history and developments, such as the renowned remains of two 150-year-old hotels. These spaces and their stories, made famous by The New Yorker writer Joseph Mitchell in his Up in the Old Hotel, will be the subject of this month’s reading and discussion.
“A legendary figure. . . . Mitchell’s reportage is so vivid, so real, that it comes out like fiction of the highest order.” —Chicago Sun-Times