“In the bookshop, all was calm. You might have been far away, in some much older city, browsing alongside the antiquarians. The pace was intent and unhurried as the customers meandered among the works of Henry James and Rex Stout and Françoise Mallet-Joris and Ivan Turgenev and Agatha Christie and the rest, more and more names turning up in front of my eyes as I stood looking.”
That was in 1963, on
Forty-Eighth Steet near Sixth Avenue in New York City. I was in Kaboom Books on
Houston Avenue in Houston in 2022. After almost sixty years, the mood was
similar – “intent and unhurried,” the way pre-digital public libraries used to
be. Almost crowded, everyone masked, much choreography and applied etiquette in
the narrow aisles between shelves. I had even weighed volumes by James and
Turgenev.
Irish-born Maeve Brennan
(1917-1993), a protégé of William Maxwell, is best remembered as a writer of
short stories for The New Yorker. In the sixties, in the persona of “the
long-winded lady,” Brennan wrote feuilletons for the magazine’s “Talk of the
Town” department. A selection was published under the title The Long-Winded
Lady: Notes from the New Yorker (1969; rev. 1998). She was one of my
models when I did street reporting and column-writing for newspapers. Go out
cold, preferably on foot, and keep your eyes and ears open. If something looks
topically important, ignore it. Talk to people and listen. Leave your precious
hypotheses in the office. Forget muckraking. Nothing’s more interesting than
most of our fellow humans.
Along with the Brennan collection I bought Osip Mandelstam’s The Moscow and Voronezh Notebooks (trans. Richard and Elizabeth McKane, Bloodaxe Books, 2003) and Javier Marias’ essay collection, the Nabokovian-titled Between Eternities and Other Writings (Margaret Jull Costa, Vintage Books, 2017).
A toddler with long
blonde hair followed me through the bookshop, peeking around corners and
giggling when I pretended to be frightened. When I met his father I
said, “That kid’s bold,” and he replied, “He doesn’t take shit from anyone.”
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