… Winter was finally the time of such exertion as to constitute a triumph over nameless cold evil. It was our stickball field, our flea market. Nobody in the neighborhood owned a car, and so the street belonged to the kids. When he recalled his Bronx upbringing for New York in 2013, he painted a vivid portrait of Great Depression–era youth and rebellious joie de vivre in the city: He also occasionally wrote for such publications as The New York Review of Books, The Nation, the New York Times, and New York (some of those writings are available, archived here). His most recent release was last year’s Andrew’s Brain. Several of his books were adapted as big-screen projects, including Welcome to Hard Times, Billy Bathgate, and Ragtime - the last of which also saw the stage and garnered four Tonys. The New York Times reports the cause was “complications from lung cancer.” He was 84.ĭoctorow, often looked at as one of the doyens of historical fiction, wrote 12 novels as well as a handful of short-story collections and a play. Doctorow, the award-winning New York author who was renowned for his historical fiction and penned such unique works as Ragtime, Billy Bathgate, City of God, and The Waterworks, died Tuesday in Manhattan.
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