Confessions of a Prehistoric Adman

From the Bronx to Madison Avenue and Lots in Between

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Confessions of a Prehistoric Adman by Harvey Gabor, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Harvey Gabor ISBN: 9781483552705
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: May 1, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Harvey Gabor
ISBN: 9781483552705
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: May 1, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
“Confessions of a Prehistoric Adman” is Harvey Gabor’s account of growing up Jewish in the Bronx to his experiences as a young man in Manhattan. He talks about the challenges of living in a neighborhood that had no cul-de-sacs, no private houses dotting grassy hillsides, no lawns. Just sidewalks and streets onto which the inhabitants of the apartment houses poured every day. With a mixture of humor and pathos some stories show the tensions that existed between ethnic groups and Harvey’s private fears of confrontations and the ever-present possibility of a bloody nose. He relates what happens when the first black boy in the neighborhood wants to join the stickball game. Also, he tells why he never saw the end of the Saturday morning show at the Loews Paradise theater. How about the Irish intellectual who wasn’t? Other stories poke fun at the foibles peculiar to Jewish families. His description of his experience as a teen-aged waiter in the Catskills and brush with the local sheriff is a riot. The account of his army unit trying to find their way out of Queens via the elusive Triborough Bridge will make you relieved that Khrushchev blinked during the Cuban missile crisis. Harvey then goes on to describe what it was like as a young, single man to move to Manhattan and the sometimes bizarre people and situations he encounters. He didn’t need a gym; he walked the city for hours from end to end observing and sometimes participating in the fascinating happenings on the subway and streets. “Who needs green grass when you can have the deliciously sleazy Times Square in the days before Mayor Giuliani turned it into Disneyland?“ he asks. Harvey and his friends, naïve and full of raging hormones, couldn’t wait to hit the pavement which sometimes landed them in uncomfortable and even dangerous situations. Gabor later became an acclaimed creative director in advertising circles and his book includes examples and wry commentary on the ad world including his beef with “Mad Men.” The stories are in turn, funny, sad and all true.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
“Confessions of a Prehistoric Adman” is Harvey Gabor’s account of growing up Jewish in the Bronx to his experiences as a young man in Manhattan. He talks about the challenges of living in a neighborhood that had no cul-de-sacs, no private houses dotting grassy hillsides, no lawns. Just sidewalks and streets onto which the inhabitants of the apartment houses poured every day. With a mixture of humor and pathos some stories show the tensions that existed between ethnic groups and Harvey’s private fears of confrontations and the ever-present possibility of a bloody nose. He relates what happens when the first black boy in the neighborhood wants to join the stickball game. Also, he tells why he never saw the end of the Saturday morning show at the Loews Paradise theater. How about the Irish intellectual who wasn’t? Other stories poke fun at the foibles peculiar to Jewish families. His description of his experience as a teen-aged waiter in the Catskills and brush with the local sheriff is a riot. The account of his army unit trying to find their way out of Queens via the elusive Triborough Bridge will make you relieved that Khrushchev blinked during the Cuban missile crisis. Harvey then goes on to describe what it was like as a young, single man to move to Manhattan and the sometimes bizarre people and situations he encounters. He didn’t need a gym; he walked the city for hours from end to end observing and sometimes participating in the fascinating happenings on the subway and streets. “Who needs green grass when you can have the deliciously sleazy Times Square in the days before Mayor Giuliani turned it into Disneyland?“ he asks. Harvey and his friends, naïve and full of raging hormones, couldn’t wait to hit the pavement which sometimes landed them in uncomfortable and even dangerous situations. Gabor later became an acclaimed creative director in advertising circles and his book includes examples and wry commentary on the ad world including his beef with “Mad Men.” The stories are in turn, funny, sad and all true.

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book Pain and Victory by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book How To Get On The Property Ladder Beginning With No Money At All by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book MetaTrader 4: Learn to Earn in FOREX by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Hume's Challenge and the Renewal of Modern Philosophy by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Negative Splits by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book The Sandmann's Journal by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book The Eyes of Marege and Kera Putih the White Monkey by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book The Lilly Effect by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Somewhere Night Falls by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Purgatory's Letter by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Hero O'Reilly and The Phantom Hacker by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Night Comes by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Here a Little and There a Little by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Say More Than I Love You by Harvey Gabor
Cover of the book Put Em All To Shame by Harvey Gabor
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy