It's the last day of 1984, and 85-year-old Lillian Boxfish is about to take a walk. As she crosses the unsafe landscape of a run-down Manhattan, a city anxious after an attack by a still-at-large subway vigilante, she encounters bartenders, bodega clerks, chauffeurs, security guards, bohemians, criminals, children, parents, and parents-to-be-in surprising moments of generosity and grace. As she strolls, she recalls a long and eventful life that included a brief reign as the highest-paid advertising woman in America, cut short by marriage, motherhood, divorce, and a breakdown. A love letter to city life no matter how shiny or sleazy, Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk by Kathleen Rooney paints a portrait of a remarkable woman across the canvas of a changing America: from the Jazz Age to the onset of the AIDS epidemic, from the Great Depression to the birth of hip-hop.
Kathleen Rooney escribió este texto a los veintitantos años, tras trabajar como modelo para artistas durante largas temporadas. El cuerpo, el sexo, el arte y la identidad se mezclan en este testimonio radicalmente original, impregnado de su epoca, de la voz de una joven del siglo xxi que busca en la historia y el pasado la raiz de sus propios sentimientos "como objeto".