Russell Shorto is the author of the acclaimed and bestselling Island at the Center of the World, and a number of other books including Amsterdam: A History of the World's Most Liberal City and Descartes' Bones. He writes regularly for The New York Times Magazine, The New Yorker, and many other publications. He is the director of the New Amsterdam Project at New-York Historical Society. He lives in Maryland.
‘A riveting, thoroughly researched account of the men and women of Indigenous, Dutch, African, Jewish, and English descent who populated this thriving seventeenth-century port that was the glory of Holland and envy of England. Filled with new knowledge, eloquent prose, and international intrigue, Russell Shorto’s history of Manhattan’s shift from Indigenous hands, to Dutch oversight, to English authority, and ultimately to a state of cultural hybridity, will take your breath away’ - Tiya Miles, author of All That She Carried ‘The flavour of New Amsterdam – pluralistic, capitalistic, pulsing with energy – has survived. The history of how a Dutch town of 1500 people and some 28 languages became the city of New York evaporated along the way. Russell Shorto has heroically recovered it, offering up the 17th century transfer of power as it actually occurred and in vivid detail. Here, amid red-tiled roofs, are secret negotiations; last-ditch, female intermediaries; and, for good measure, a Connecticut alchemist. Best of all, Shorto himself feels everywhere present in these spirited, revelatory pages’ - Stacy Schiff, author of The Witches: Salem, 1692 Praise for The Island at the Center of the World: ‘A landmark work … Shorto paints the emotions and attitudes of his characters with a sure hand, and bestows on each a believable, living presence’ - The Times ‘Narratively irresistible, intellectually provocative, historically invaluable’ - Guardian ‘Rattlingly well told – a terrific popular history about a past that beautifully illuminates the present’ - Sunday Times ‘Remarkable … compulsively interesting’ - New Statesman ‘A triumph of scholarship and a rollicking narrative’ - Walter Isaacson