skyscraperland
English
Etymology
From skyscraper + -land.
Noun
skyscraperland (uncountable)
- (rare) An area with a great amount of skyscrapers.
- 1989, Enclitic, volume 11, page 85:
- Two forces jostle each other in the American Psyche: the drive to make it big in the culture of corporate skyscraperland; and the yearning to escape these cell-blocks and embrace “meaningful” existence by roaming the frontier as some kind of cowboy or new age hipster.
- 1991, John Foreman, New York State (Frommer’s), 2nd edition, pages 71–72:
- Smith & Wollensky, corner of Third Avenue and 49th Street (tel. 753-1530), is a big (seating capacity: 400), old-fashioned green and white wooden building in the heart of Third Avenue skyscraperland.
- 2009, Michael Shilling, Rock Bottom: A Novel, Back Bay Books, →ISBN:
- The editor, some butch British fuck named Arthur St. George, took it upon himself to turn his review of Rocket Heart into an editorial on the evils of irresponsible rock-star life and made this screed the Editor’s Note, right under a picture of him looking smarmy at his desk in skyscraperland.
- 2013, Roger Hudson, “San Francisco Dreaming”, in Plaything of the Great God Kafka, Lapwing Publications, →ISBN, page 12:
- A replaying perhaps by my mind / of the time / I lost my passport / in San Francisco / and the hectic day spent / reporting to police / reporting to Consulate / obtaining emergency passport / checking insurance / rebooking flight / by internet / by telephone / by footslog tram taxi uphill downhill / in amazing steephill skyscraperland / of movie memories
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