New Yorkers After the Bombing: Resilient or Fatigued?
New Yorkers’ measured reaction to the explosion in Chelsea could mean they have come to accept that such incidents a part of their daily lives.
by Max Kutner
Oct 07, 2016
4 minutes
Updated | On a warm Saturday night in September, around 8:15, Kenneth Goldsmith, a poet and faculty member at the University of Pennsylvania, left his Manhattan apartment on 26th Street and Sixth Avenue and headed to a grocery store a few blocks north. “The street was normal,” he says. “I saw some firetrucks down on Sixth Avenue and thought, Well, it’s New York.”
When he got home, he turned on the television and heard the news: While he was grocery shopping, on September 17, a bomb had been detonated three blocks south of his apartment building, injuring approximately 31 people. Soon, to his surprise,
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days