My girlfriend and I moved into a shitty apartment in Astoria, so close to the East River that when I look for restaurants nearby on my cell phone it often gives me recommendations for things, far outside my price range or interest, on Manhattan's aristocratic Upper East Side. It's a 15 minute walk to the nearest train station but we have a washer and drier in the apartment and rent is cheap so I can't really complain.
Upper East Side, So Close Yet So Far |
Upon arriving in New York I found myself increasingly identifying with Chicago. I listened to Kanye and Chance the Rapper endlessly, maybe mostly to hear all their references to the city I had just left behind. I needed to hear Chance say "Went to Kenwood? Me too" and know what Kenwood Academy at 51st and Lake Park looked like. I needed to feel that I understood a place and all of its cultural references. That when Kanye rapped about Lake Shore Drive, I knew every exit from 57th northward. For me those lines were more than words, they were signifiers of a place I called home and local knowledge I'd accrued. I had belonged somewhere.
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Chance the Rapper, Circa 2013 |
My feet, and all of my stuff for that matter, were in New York but my mind was still on Chicago. Almost weekly I brought up Harold's Chicken Shack with my co-workers who had gone to Northwestern, even though they repeatedly made it clear they had no idea what I was talking about. I would quote to people the exact price of a half-dark special at Harold's ($3.18 with student discount) as I reminisced about delicious, barbecue sauce soaked fried chicken.
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At Harold's, Hands Covered in Mild Sauce, Sucking down a Mystic, Mid 2012 |
So I tried to experience as much of New York as I could. I left work each day with a mission and took each weekend as an opportunity. I ate at a Cypriot restaurant and learned that Ouzo is not a very responsible beverage to pair with dinner. I went to a brewery in the farthest northwest corner of Queens where you could see Riker's Island. I went to book talks in bars and art shows in warehouses. I sat atop roofs in Williamsburg and took the ferry to Governors Island for a poetry festival. I went to almost every single museum in the city that had free hours. I marched across the Brooklyn bridge with thousands of protestors. I found Ivorian restaurants and the best arepas Jackson Heights had to offer. I got stranded waiting for what seemed like eternities at subway stops trying to making the late night exodus back to Queens.
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Moonrise in Chelsea |
Eventually, when a friend from back home visited I began telling him about this great place to get fried chicken called Pies and Thighs. I was almost salivating as I talked about their chicken biscuit. And later thinking back to that conversation, I realized I'd finally found a new chicken place.
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