Leon Freilich

Leon Freilich
Location
Park Slope, New York,
Title
Scribbler
Company
Ink, Inc.
Bio
Light verse is my medium For the war on tedium. Draw up a comfy chair, Give a look right here. What've you got to lose Other than the blues? Think of this as an app To make you a cheerier chapp.

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Salon.com
OCTOBER 1, 2010 8:19AM

The Streets of Brooklyn Heights

Rate: 8 Flag
Truman Capote and fruit compote  
          
Have something in common worth a note:

They both of them thrived in Brooklyn Heights

And both became hot tourist sites.

The Heights remains a big attraction

And gets a major-league reaction

Not only because it's New York's first suburb

And mentioned in every Capote blurb

But also for its nutritious street names,

Which somehow burn with singular flames.

There's tree-lined Orange Street, for one,

Where children ride their bikes for fun.

Then Cranberry, going down to the river

And Manhattan's skyline--makes you shiver.

Pineapple Street demands a stop,

Where Walt Whitman had a printing shop.

Two para-fruit streets lie nearby

Deserving of the visitor's eye:

The first suggests a juicy melon

And has the tangy name Joralemon,

While the second's Poplar, a salute

To Billie Holiday's strange fruit.


Brooklyn Heights--a must-see stop,

Delicious brownstones with a cherry on top!

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Comments

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A good place to live, and I did, in the 1980s. Population, 25,000. New York's first suburb, all of it landmarked, so there's almost no new construction and no population growth. A permanent small town.
I once aspired to Brooklyn Heights--blame it on Patty Duke. But found happiness on Eastern Parkway. (I had a dream about Tom's Diner on Washington Ave. just hours ago!!!)
Brooklyn Heights offers sky instead of skyline. Until you look across the river, of course.

DS, I grew up on Eastern Parkway & Rochester Ave. Attended PS 167, then 191 and JHS 210 before deserting to Manhattan.
Is this a "Tree Grows in Brooklyn" poem? I've been to the Williamsburg section. Interesting. I really enjoyed this post. R
Sarah, it's more of a Me Grows in Brooklyn thing.
An ode, you say, Kate? Better than yesteryear's O.D.
Loved this, especially the "para-fruits."