Sonderbooks Book Review of

Manhattan

Mapping the Story of an Island

by Jennifer Thermes

Manhattan

Mapping the Story of an Island

by Jennifer Thermes

Review posted July 29, 2024.
Abrams Books for Young Readers, 2019. 64 pages.
Review written January 28, 2022, from a library book.
Starred Review

This book is fascinating! I'm sorry that I didn't discover it until I was pulling it from the library shelves to take off the New sticker. Usually I do that task rather mindlessly, but this book called out to me to open it, and then I couldn't put it away until I'd pored over the fascinating details.

It's a large-format book that uses maps to tell the history of the island of Manhattan. It talks about how it was formed and then about the Lenape living on Mannahatta for thousands of years.

Then it tells about the history of the island (with maps) through time periods. The Dutch put a town on the island, followed by the British, who occupied the city during the American Revolution. The commissioners planned the grid of streets in 1811. Further events resulted in changes, including the Great Fire of 1835, which led to the development of Central Park, and the Great Blizzard of 1888, which led to the development of the subway. It also mentions the importance of the slave trade to the city and slave labor to build the city. Free African Americans eventually moved outside the city to Seneca Village -- and that land was taken from them for a low price to build Central Park.

We read about the importance of immigration to the island and the Gilded Age of 1870 to 1900, where millionaires lived on Fifth Avenue, while immigrants lived in poverty in tenements downtown. We learn about the building of subways and bridges and skyscrapers, which all changed the look of the city. And of course, it finishes up with Manhattan today -- though I was surprised by a page before that mentioning Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and how the subways were flooded. The new threat to Manhattan is rising sea levels. As the author states, "Protecting it from water will be this century's greatest challenge."

And after all these big, fascinating pages of details, there's a complete timeline in the back, next to a page of select sources.

I've been to New York City a few times, which helped give me context. If I ever get the chance to go again, rereading this book would be a wonderful way to prepare.