Newsweek

A New Chumley's for a New Manhattan

Visited by generations of great writers and local bohemians, Chumley's reopens in a Greenwich Village rife with tourists and hedge-funders.
"The new Chumley's is shinier and more expensive, but just like its predecessor, it transports you with its light and conversation, makes you feel like Dreiser and Steinbeck are just a table away."
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I was ready to hate the new Chumley’s. The old Chumley’s was the Greenwich Village speakeasy squeezed into a Bedford Street rowhouse that was visited by Hemingway, Steinbeck, Cather, Faulkner and just about every other writer you read in high school and tried to emulate in college. When I discovered it in the very early 2000s, it seemed to me far more interesting than the self-consciously literary bars and cafés drawing New York City’s ambitious and bespectacled to Park Slope and the East Village.

Chumley’s was too old and too small for any such pretensions. Though the dust jackets of its famous patrons’ famous books adorned the walls, it had become a bar for local firefighters, as well as for the kind of refreshingly ordinary people New York had steadily been pushing out in the name of progress. There was a secret entrance, down Barrow Street and through Pamela Court, and leading friends through the haunting, nearly sacral silence

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