Sunday, June 07, 2015

Gone native: how Manhattan’s richest women follow the laws of the jungle

To truly understand America’s super-rich, observe them as an anthropologist would … that’s what Wednesday Martin has done, and her memoir Primates of Park Avenue is provoking whoops of rage from wealthy wives

Wednesday Martin Primates of Park Avenue New York upper east side
Wednesday Martin, author of Primates of Park Avenue, which details the privileged lives of New York’s Upper East Side women. Photograph: Pacific Coast News/BarcroftMedia
From Tom Wolfe’s Bonfire of the Vanities to Candace Bushnell’s Sex and the City, New York’s Upper East Side has long offered novelists and satirists a rich seam to mine. But until Wednesday Martin came along, no one had thought to use primatology in a portrait of one of America’s wealthiest – and most competitive – urban enclaves.

Martin, mother-of-two and wife of a banker, is the author of Primates of Park Avenue, part-memoir, part-study of young East Side mothers and their social customs. The book, published last week, has been variously described as sexist, harsh and inaccurate.
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