Early in the story, a
police officer is posted at the corner of East End Avenue and Gracie Square. He
keeps an eye on a junkie who seems to be casing a drug store. It’s between
three and four in the morning. People are already walking their dogs in Carl
Schurz Park. “Amazing,” the cop thinks. “Dreamlike.” The junkie disappears, then
briefly reappears to steal a bicycle from an apartment building. We learn from
the narrator he has done time in Rikers Island, Sing Sing, Auburn and
Dannemora. He leaves with the bike, gone forever from imagination.
The cop watches a woman in
a long red coat picking through a trash basket. He has seen her before: “She was
harmless.” Here is the detail supplied by Maxwell that touched me: “When she
found something useful or valuable, she stuffed it in her dirty canvas bag, the
richer by a pair of sandals with a broken strap or a perfectly clean copy of Sartor
Resartus.” Why Carlyle? I have no idea. The choice of title is amusing,
unlikely and somehow appropriate, and I can’t tell you why. Later, while
walking the family dog, the husband of the young couple finds the woman,
apparently dead, lying on a stoop along East Avenue: “The red coat did not
stir. Then he saw the canvas bag crammed with the fruit of her night’s
scavenging, and backed down the steps.” Like the bicycle thief, the dead woman disappears.
Maxwell reliably delivers
what he once called “the breath of life.” For much of his long life, besides
being the fiction editor for The New Yorker, he was an industrious writer and
reader. He is not a “writer’s writer”
but a reader’s writer. The novel he devoted the most time to, The Chateau
(1961), is a disappointment, but at least two of them are masterpieces – Time
Will Darken It (1948) and So Long, See You Tomorrow (1980). In 1997,
Maxwell published an essay, “Nearing Ninety,” in the New York Times Magazine:
“Before I am ready to call
it quits I would like to reread every book I have ever deeply enjoyed,
beginning with Jane Austen and going through shelf after shelf of the
bookcases, until I arrive at the 'Autobiographies' of William Butler Yeats.
As it is, I read a great deal of the time. I am harder to please, though. I see
flaws in masterpieces. Conrad indulging in rhetoric when he would do better to
get on with it. I would read all day long and well into the night if there were
no other claims on my time. Appointments with doctors, with the dentist. The
monthly bank statement. Income tax returns. And because I don't want to turn
into a monster, people.”
Maxwell was born on this
date, Aug. 16, in 1908 and died on July 31, 2000.
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