Brooklyn Heights People: Valerie Frankel

Valerie Frankel—author, blogger, journalist—has lived in Brooklyn Heights since 1992, and in that time has watched the neighborhood change dramatically. Which can be both a blessing and a curse.

“Where Heights Café is now, there used to be this really old-fashioned, greasy diner, where the underside of the table had an inch worth of gum,” she recalled over the phone a few days ago, waxing nostalgic about Montague Street. “The place you go for French fries with brown gravy at midnight.”

The Heights was less gentrified then, and though Frankel, who lives on Garden Place, bemoaned the loss of character that comes with hipsters and big box stores, she likened Court Street north of Atlantic Avenue to “a war zone” when she first arrived.

“There was an abandoned porn theater, whole blocks of boarded up buildings,” she said, and concluded that for all their flaws, chain stores and yuppies are preferable to porn theaters, abandoned or not.

Now 46 years old, Frankel, a former magazine editor who became a full-time freelancer after her two kids were born, joked about how rarely she leaves the area. “I hate going into the city!” she said, laughing. “I have no needs that cannot be met in Brooklyn Heights.”

Frankel spends her days in the Heights writing—writing fiction, writing non-fiction, but writing, always. She has penned 16 or 17 novels, by her count; dozens of magazine articles for publications like Good Housekeeping and Self; and one well-received memoir, Thin is the New Happy, in 2008. Frankel’s second memoir, “It’s Hard Not to Hate You,” will be out in September, and focuses on a recent health scare she experienced while also going through a career crisis.

“I resolved to let all the hate out, after keeping a poker face my whole life,” she said, with what seemed like characteristic honesty.

Frankel started out in the promotions department of a magazine that no longer exists, and begged her way into the editorial side, where she got some clips, got fired, and then got hired by the now defunct Mademoiselle, where she stayed for ten years. At night, she’d work on mystery novels that were published but made little money.

Despite years of pouring her heart and soul into being a professional writer, Frankel’s best-known accomplishment, if not her most salacious, came last summer, when she was recruited to ghostwrite a book for a small, tan, Italian meatball.

“I loved every minute of it,” Frankel said of working with Nicole Polizzi—better known as Snooki from Jersey Shore—to write her novel, A Shore Thing. “She’s great. I don’t care if it is a sign of the apocalypse. It was a totally awesome experience as a writer.”

The two ladies worked together on the plot, and Frankel was pleasantly surprised by how many good ideas Snooki brought to the table, and by how controversial the seemingly innocuous 23-year old can be. “She sure doesn’t deserve all the hate that comes her way,” Frankel said. “She’s a nice kid.”

The Snooki gig begat another ghostwriting venture, though she can’t say for which celebrity she is currently penning “a whopper of a book,” this time non-fiction. Frankel loves ghostwriting, if for no other reason than it provides an exit from her own head.

“I’ve been writing for a long time,” she said. “It’s always inspiring to challenge myself in different ways.”

She’s also been living in Brooklyn Heights for a long time, and with so many of her favorite haunts—like Pete’s Waterfront Ale House and the Henry Street Tazza—within spitting distance, Frankel and her family don’t plan on leaving anytime soon. And though the neighborhood is, in her view, nearly perfect, Frankel lodged one complaint—inspired, perhaps, by a certain hard-partying Jersey girl?

“I would love there to be a really raucous nightclub, or something,” she said, on the grounds that it would bring more young people, and therefore more energy, to the area. “It’s contagious—the freshness, and excitement. Like this is the place to be.”

For Frankel, it already is.

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  • danno

    This September, I’ll have been in BH for 20 years. I remember the burned-out porn theater, but never thought that that section of Court Street was a war zone. Then again, I never had much reason to go down there.

    I didn’t mind Burger King and liked John’s Pizza, and I recall a decent hardware store where Nine West used to be. I once drove past the Promenade Diner to see Jimmy Breslin in animated conversation with Norman Mailer and thought I’d gone to literary heaven. There was once a pretty nice bar/restaurant in the Lantern space, wasn’t there? Then there was an elaborate but short-lived beauty salon.

    And remember the Korean green grocer where Starbucks put down roots more than 15 years ago?

    There was, briefly, a very nice if pricey takeaway catering place on Henry Street next to John’s, in the space since annexed by Corcoran. I’ve no recollection of what was in the City Chemist spot before Waldenbooks.

  • Cranberry Beret

    Oh Monty, you’re too much

  • PJL

    Miss John’s Pizza (why did they close?) and Montague Street Saloon, not to mention the ‘new’ O’Keefe’s….

  • epc

    Question from a relative neighborhood newbie (~ten years): when Moses paved over the blocks between Henry & Fulton as “urban renewal”, was there anything in the plan to replace the commercial space that was destroyed, or was it just assumed that this area of Brooklyn didn’t need storefronts or small offices?

  • Eddy de Lectron

    @ Alana,
    Hey, I’m only a middle aged fart… besides you should watch that tongue, you’ll be here sooner than you realize ;)

  • Andrew Porter

    A long time ago, I was part of a BHA-organized picket line, in front of Madison Square Garden on 33rd Street and 7th Avenue; we were picketing the then-owner of Burger King (was this Pillsbury?), whose plans for their fast-food place on Montague (now site of Banana Republic) included really atrocious neon signs, just like they have everywhere else. The compromise reached resulted in “tasteful” banners on the front of the building, which was built as a bank—hence the pillars. This was a cause celebré at the time in BH.

    Epic, if you do some Googling, you can see that the original buildings between Henry and Fulton (now Cadman Plaza W.) from Clark Street north were just like most of the other residential buildings in BH. There were Deco apt buildings from the 1920s, older brick and wooden buildings, etc. There weren’t too many businesses on the east side of Henry. The photos of Henry Street on the Brooklyn Historical Society website—each click gives a random view of various locations in Brooklyn, but you can search on specific streets and addresses—show how normal, how like everything else in BH, the street looked.

  • Matthew Parker

    Been living in Bklyn since ’66. Been living in Cobble Hill/Bklyn Heights since ’88. I too remember the porn theater, but way before it was abandoned. (not first hand though; I used to walk from Cobble Hill to the Borough Hall subway and pass it 2x a day)

    The porn theater, which was called the Cin-Art has a wood sign hanging off the marquee that said “Couples Welcome”. I got a chuckle whenever I used to pass that sign.

    When all the stores were bought out to make way for the movie theater that’s now there, I was trying to somehow obtain the “Couples Welcome” sign for nostalgia; unsuccessfully though.

  • Alana

    @Eddy De Lectron… I will be 21 forever

  • bornhere

    Exceptional, Karl! Especially cool to see the New China Teacup.

    And for all the piling on Alana, she did invoke Las Tres Palmas, admittedly not that old — but here’s to “it takes one to know one.” (And at least one of the people posting is under 30.)

    Before Square Circle, there was a short-lived but really nice (and huge) Korean-run “produce and” shop. Anybody? It was there in the early 80s.

  • http://Building Jeffrey J Smith

    Interesting…

  • Jorale-man

    It’s curious how gentrification works. The porno theater is long gone but Court Street is still home to several bail bonds places, fast food joints, etc. And wasn’t there a strip club in the St. George Hotel for a time?

  • Mikey

    Thanks nabeguy, Karl.

    Eddy owes me a grand.

  • nabeguy

    Jora, the bail bond places are not that unusual given the proximity to the courts and detention center on Atlantic. And Club Wildfyre was a sign of the times…namely the 70’s, when the whole city was Dodge city. Clark Street Station, which is currently occupied by Ozu, was really not much better, although it didn’t have half-naked women…just half-brained customers, a lot of whom were off-duty cops and corrections officers. As I recall, there was a cop-on-cop shooting at the Station.
    The fact is, the Heights wasn’t (and probably still isn’t) immune to organized crime. The By George and Heights Limo (shades of Goodfellas) were favorite hang-outs for the local loan-sharks. Some of these old-timers are still around, so I’ll bite my tongue (and save my ass)

  • nabeguy

    BTW, Karl, thanks for putting that video together. I only found that BHS site today and didn’t have the time to be more comprehensive in my references. Genius that you are, you not only took me and many others to memory lane, you paved it. Brilliant.

  • http://selfabsorbedboomer.blogspot.com Claude Scales

    Clark Street Station had a good run from the time it opened, which was just about when Capulet’s on Montague closed, until Jerry Bose, the popular former Capulet’s bartender they hired, left. For a couple of years they were essentially Capulet’s in exile. I once saw the then Lieutenant Governor sitting at a table there. I knew him from when he had been mayor of a small city in Western New York for which I’d done some work early in my career.

  • nabeguy

    Claude, have you seen Ron Green around the nabe? Another former Caps bartender.

  • nabeguy

    Hey, val, if you ever want to make the switch to non-fiction, I think you’ve got the groundwork for a pretty good tome right here. In fact, I can even give you a neighborhood character that was the Snooki of her time.

  • Eddy de Lectron

    @ Mikey, How do I owe you a grand when you are wrong?
    You said “I’m pretty sure the Ebinger’s (Sinclairs as well) was in the Housing Works spot” That is incorrect.
    I said “No Mikey, HW is is where the Montague Saloon was” That is correct.
    You then said “Montague Saloon was not there long. This was before Montague Saloon” also incorrect.
    My Reply “The Montague Saloon was there for 20 years Before that it was the Piccadilly Restaurant. The bakery was closer to the corner. I’ll bet $1,000″. I am correct, see link below.

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/13189502@N02/5530698829/

  • confused

    I don’t understand the obsession with Montague St. Isn’t there more to the area than this one street? Weren’t other streets interesting (beyond the block of the Hotel St. George)? Yet, this seems to be the main focus of commenters. Very surprising, but perhaps I’m missing something (or wasn’t around to see the excitement that now no longer exists).

  • http://www.valeriefrankel.com val

    I missed 20 comments since I last looked.
    @Nabeguy and @Claude: You rock.
    @anon You’re a tool.
    @alana Let’s drink.
    @Karl Great vid!
    Baskin Robbins: where LensCrafters is now.

  • Alana

    Val I will take you up on that offer for a drink to discuss this very interesting Blog that has almost nothing to do with point of this blog. YOUR BOOKS

  • Eddy de Lectron

    Val, Correct. Baskin & Robbins moved there in the early eighties.

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/13189502@N02/5531600413/

  • http://selfabsorbedboomer.blogspot.com Claude Scales

    Val: Thanks! My wife reminded me that we met you some years back, when our friend Lisa, who then lived downstairs from you, threw a small party for parents and kids.

    Nabeguy: I’ve lost track of Ron, as well as Jerry. The only member of the Capulet’s staff I still see is Bill, who worked as a waiter. John Ormond, another former waiter, lived in my building for some years, but has moved back home to California. Did you get any information on the Dylan question?

  • nabeguy

    Asked, but not definitively answered. The best my brother could come up with was that he “doubts whether Bob even remembers the reference”.

  • nancy

    Slades was where Lantern is now. it was a nicer restaurant..the onwer moved to California. There was ann Educational Alliance above the Walden Books/ now Corcoran space. Waldos was where Buon Gusto is now (and I bet they wouldn’t be trying to hide their Grade Pending sign)

    I still miss the all you can drink champagne brunch at Montague Sreet Saloon. :( There was a Hebrew NAtional Deli where La Traviata is and a Cheese Celler where Andy’s is. As for off the street, I miss the Seduttos store next to the Clark Street subway Station, and I miss BagelLady!!

  • SidneyPlace1957

    I came to the party late – and to answer the irritated question about the obsession with Montague street – if you lived in the Heights in the sixties and seventies, it was pretty much the place to do all your shopping – okay, the Bohacks (then D’Agostino’s – now CVS ) was where you’d go for groceries, and Fulton Mall to go to Korvette’s or A&S’s (as it was called back then – now Macy’s).

    But a reason to re-visit Montague street is to remind people (or educate them) in what has happened since – it had a much more idiosyncratic flavor (Baskin Robbins notwithstanding) with the curio store (what else to call it?) Meunier’s and THREE bookstores (Womrath’s, Penny Bridge and the used bookstore run by the old Beatniks downstairs). Only Nabeguy might remember Prana, the head shop that was where the sushi restaurant near Henry is now.- black light posters, lava lamps, etc.

    You can also glimpse in the video “Hadden Hall” which I believe eventually became “Silver’s” which was the candy store cum comic book stand cum hangout for school kids. As I say, this is not simply nostalgia for what was, but a way of letting people know that Montague street was once a vibrant quirky little block, not the mostly souless place it is today…at least Variety Mart is still fighting the good fight!

    Oh, and people asking about John’s Pizza – if that’s the one that was on Henry off of Montague towards Remsen – with the wood burning stove – it was run by the Randazzo brothers – John, Joey and Sal. They moved to Joralemon street for a while (in the space that then became the second La Traviata, now a long empty eyesore). I loved those guys – real Brooklyn boys. From what I remember, they skipped out on their lease and just took off one day.

  • http://selfabsorbedboomer.blogspot.com Claude Scales

    Nabeguy: I’m reminded of the response I got from late Lion’s Head barkeep Tommy “Sugar” Butler when I asked him why Pete Hamill covered several years of hanging out at the Head in about three pages at the end of his autobiography A Drinking Life: “He doesn’t remember most of it.”

  • Eddy de Lectron

    Nancy, Slades was where Ricky’s is.
    Before the string of restaurants where Lantern is, was
    a stationary/candy/toy store called Joe-Mel’s aka “Silvers”.

  • nancy

    Ahh, Eddy, you are correct. I fogot the revolving stores!!

  • nabeguy

    Clause, my brother did pass on some sad news that Paul Schiffman passed away, but I see you covered that in your blog.