ABSTRACT

F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby still captivates readers with its vision of 1920s New York as a city of infinite potential, where ambition and defeat live hand in hand. This sentiment is captured, with even greater acuity, in the pages of Aben Kandel's nearly forgotten masterpiece of urban life, City for Conquest (1936). The source of the classic 1940s James Cagney film of the same name, this panoramic New York novel captures the complex patterns of city life, vividly evoking a metropolis of dreams and nightmares.

Kandel portrays a volatile city inhabited by the aristocrat, the criminal, the idealist, the bohemian, the driven, the entrapped, and the impoverished, all equally striving "to make a dent in this town." The city itself is booming, its new constructions callously built on destruction, supplanting with equal disdain the slums of Brooklyn and the farm fields of the Bronx. This feverish microcosm of humanity inhabits a world of immense inequality where "six blocks from Wall Street, people haven't got a dime, six blocks from duplex apartments, people live in hovels" and "between the scarlet sore and the apple of the eye there lay a thick eyebrow of indifference."

A literary triumph in the tradition of Stephen Crane's Maggie: A Girl of the Streets and John Dos Passos' Manhattan Transfer, and out of print for far too long, City for Conquest is the inaugural work of fiction in Transaction's new Lost Urban Classics series.

part 1|188 pages

Bouquet of the Boroughs

chapter 1|22 pages

Bouquet of the Boroughs

chapter 2|13 pages

2

chapter 3|23 pages

3

chapter 4|19 pages

4

chapter 5|8 pages

5

chapter 6|12 pages

6

chapter 7|15 pages

7

chapter 8|6 pages

8

chapter 9|11 pages

9

chapter 10|11 pages

10

chapter 11|11 pages

11

chapter 12|6 pages

12

chapter 13|9 pages

13

chapter 14|7 pages

14

chapter 15|7 pages

15

chapter 16|6 pages

16

part 2|175 pages

Fruit of the Stone

chapter 17|7 pages

17

chapter 18|11 pages

18

chapter 19|5 pages

19

chapter 20|16 pages

20

chapter 21|7 pages

21

chapter 22|9 pages

22

chapter 23|9 pages

23

chapter 24|10 pages

24

chapter 25|14 pages

25

chapter 26|7 pages

26

chapter 27|8 pages

27

chapter 28|17 pages

28

chapter 29|9 pages

29

chapter 30|13 pages

30

chapter 31|4 pages

31

chapter 32|5 pages

32

chapter 33|9 pages

33

chapter 34|9 pages

34

chapter 35|3 pages

35

chapter 36|1 pages

36