Nobody understands the origins of New York City better than historian Russell Shorto. Taking Manhattan brilliantly illuminates how a seventeenth century Dutch enclave of 1,500 residents, on acreage swindled from Native Americans, rose to become the most cosmopolitan New World port in the 17th century and beyond. Shorto, a detail-driven scholar, seamlessly weaves together secondary literature with newly translated Dutch documents to astonishing effect. This narrative is the historiographical Rosetta Stone of how New York City was born. With keen exactitude, Shorto explains how the Atlantic Slave Trade was an essential component of the building of New York City. As both a work of American and European history Taking Manhattan soars!–Douglas Brinkley, Katherine Tsanoff Brown Chair in Humanities and Professor of History at Rice University, author of Rightful Heritage