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Man in Profile

Page 36

by Thomas Kunkel

“On religion and the hereafter”: JM, “Old Mr. Flood,” UITOH, p. 375.

  “On life”: JM, “The Black Clams,” UITOH, p. 408.

  “All the things I said in there about eating fish”: JM interview with NS.

  “Joe was a man who dwelt at great length”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “Sometimes facts don’t tell the truth”: JM interview with NS.

  was “appalled” by the idea of continuing: Ibid.

  “As a reporter of the New York scene”: New York Herald Tribune, 10/24/48.

  the Mr. Flood pieces “fiction of the highest”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  CHAPTER 9: THE BOTTOM OF THE HARBOR

  “I’m enclosing a clipping”: JM to Ellery Thompson, 5/13/48.

  “a fascinating book to anyone interested”: JM to Daniel deNoyelles, 6/12/78.

  “Books, so many books”: Interview with NMS.

  “I [wrote] with a kind of shorthand”: JM interview with NS.

  “If you’re going to have lunch with him”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “He butchered according to Leviticus”: JM journal note, April 1989.

  “Mitchell invented a temporal dimension”: Village Voice, 4/29/05.

  His desk held a glass full of “needle-sharp pencils”: Gardner Botsford, A Life of Privilege, Mostly, p. 149.

  Nonfiction writing “has to have a lyricism”: JM interview with NS.

  “I’d insert maybe three commas”: Interview with Gardner Botsford.

  “[He] took forever to write a piece”: Botsford: A Life of Privilege, Mostly, p. 196.

  “I would report that I’ve read”: Harold Ross to JM, 7/26/49.

  “This climax is a tremendous letdown”: Perrin, “Paragon of Reporters: Joseph Mitchell.”

  “articles about old restaurants were getting to be”: JM journal note, 6/27/78.

  “remember conversations word for word”: JM journal, undated.

  “Something that Louie said after we came down”: JM interview with NS.

  CHAPTER 10: MR. HUNTER

  “You had to make every edge cut”: JM reporting notes for “Mr. Hunter’s Grave.”

  “[E]very time I read the Anna Livia Plurabelle section”: JM, UITOH, p. xii.

  “He knew that everything had fallen apart”: The New York Times, 7/22/92.

  “The revelations that keep coming”: JM interview with NS.

  “I couldn’t really write about anybody”: Ibid.

  “At The New Yorker, and in nonfiction writing”: Ben Yagoda, About Town: The New Yorker and the World It Made, p. 401.

  it was difficult to say “how much…is gospel and how much”: Ibid.

  “[This] manifestly is not quote at all”: Ibid.

  “Yes, there was something literary”: Interview with Dan Frank.

  “If you find [a subject]”: JM interview with NS.

  “We don’t know what the hell is going on”: JM interview with NS.

  “I’ve been reading your pieces”: John Davenport to JM, 10/19/56.

  “We are observing”: George Hunter to JM, 12/10/56.

  CHAPTER 11: A RIVER IN A DREAM

  “I really don’t know how they did it”: Interview with NMS.

  Therese would “saunter down the street”: NMS, in an introduction to an exhibition of Therese Mitchell photographs, July 2006.

  “He was so canonical”: NMS family memoir.

  “He…spoke to his family every Sunday”: Ibid.

  “He generally thought people were pretty horrible”: Interview with NMS.

  “I told him…how that traumatized me”: Ibid.

  “As I said, either ‘harbour’ or ‘harbor’ ”: JM to Ivan Von Auw, Jr., 10/14/61.

  “Listen, Nick,” Mitchell snapped, “when I feel like”: (Fredericksburg, Va.) Free Lance-Star, 11/17/41.

  could “suddenly become a different person”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “is generally the way he reacted”: NMS family memoir.

  his “genius for finding real-life metaphors”: The Washington Post, 7/21/85.

  “The memorable things in The Bottom of the Harbor”: The New York Times, 4/24/60.

  “One day [Ross] put his head in my office”: JM to James Thurber, 8/24/57.

  “When I first came to The New Yorker”: Ibid.

  “Mr. Liebling, if you’re expecting”: JM journal note, undated.

  “someone had beaten [us] to the punch”: JM interview with NS.

  “If [Mitchell] ever disappears”: Gill, Here at The New Yorker, p. 319.

  His “antiquarianism was obsessive”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “He had enormous collections of old bricks”: Ibid.

  CHAPTER 12: JOE GOULD REVISITED

  “In this state,” Mitchell wrote: JM, “Joe Gould’s Secret,” UITOH, p. 681.

  “I was exasperated”: Ibid., p. 687.

  “I have been working on [it]”: JM to Clayton Hoagland, 5/1/63.

  “a New Yorker Profile that I’ve been working on”: JM to Roy Wilder, Jr., 11/17/63.

  “You’d love London, I think”: St. Clair McKelway to JM, 8/6/57.

  “You could hear Liebling”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “Every Christmas since 1963”: JM to Jean Stafford, 1/23/78.

  “Everybody sat for a while”: JM eulogy for A. J. Liebling, January 1964.

  “Then we realize that Gould has been Mitchell”: Hyman, “The Art of Joseph Mitchell.”

  Gould “is Mitchell’s nightmare vision of himself”: Christopher Carduff, “Fish-eating, Whiskey, Death & Rebirth,” The New Criterion, November 1992.

  “To me a very tragic thing”: JM interview with NS.

  “bolsters rather than contradicts Mitchell’s suspicions”: Village Voice, 4/7/00.

  CHAPTER 13: INTO THE PAST

  “My share in the proceeds”: JM to A. N. Mitchell, 7/23/64.

  “One day the producer called me up”: JM to Rose Wharton, 10/21/64.

  “Afterwards, we went over to the Ritz-Carlton”: Ibid.

  “No one on the eighteenth floor”: Susan Sheehan to JM, 9/24/64.

  “Joseph Mitchell is one of our finest journalists”: The Washington Post, 9/19/65.

  “Mitchell is a formidable prose stylist”: Hyman, “The Art of Joseph Mitchell.”

  “When the New Journalists came ashore”: Norman Sims, True Stories: A Century of Literary Journalism, p. 165.

  “We never thought of ourselves as experimenting”: JM interview with author.

  “I was a reporter, and then I became a magazine writer”: JM journal note, undated.

  “I didn’t have a whole lot of interest”: JM to Evan Elliot, 10/10/90.

  “he fed that alligator everything he could think of”: JM interview for the North Carolina Awards, 1984.

  The Robesonian—“a novel I have been reading”: JM unfinished autobiography.

  “I especially liked it because it linked me”: JM to Roy Parker, October 1983.

  “After I’m down in North Carolina”: JM interview with NS.

  “a town in which I grew up”: JM unfinished autobiography.

  “We always thought Joe would come back”: Interview with Harry Mitchell.

  “I have offered to give [Joseph] the McCall farm”: Interview with David Britt.

  wielding a “long carving knife”: JM journal note, 7/28/74.

  “See if the commode will flush”: Ibid.

  “One of the reasons I got so depressed”: Ibid., 1974.

  “I very rarely feel altogether at ease”: Ibid., 7/29/74.

  “I no longer have much enthusiasm for New York City”: JM to Roy Wilder, Jr., 8/12/72.

  “I know the exact day that I began living in the past”: JM unfinished autobiography.

  “I was very sure that he was seeing”: JM journal notes, undated.

  “In other words”: JM to Ellery Thompson, 12/18/75.

  “The reason I have hesitated to write to you”: JM to K. C. Butler,
9/22/76.

  “I am only now beginning to realize”: JM journal note, undated.

  “I wanted his respect”: (Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer, 8/16/92.

  “No matter how boring it may sound”: JM to Ann Honeycutt, 3/14/77.

  CHAPTER 14: INTO THE WILDERNESS

  “Except for Maron Simon”: JM to Thomas Waring, 6/4/81.

  “they simply weren’t representative”: JM journal note, undated.

  He was “distinctly a New Yorker”: JM interview with Ben Yagoda.

  “What I must establish as quickly as possible”: JM journal note, undated.

  “Well, take it easy”: Ibid.

  “I got to be like the younger brother”: JM interview with Ben Yagoda.

  “Listening to Joe talk about her”: The New York Times, 12/29/96.

  “We had without ever talking about it”: JM journal note, undated.

  “I went back into the kitchen”: Ibid.

  “I began to be oppressed”: JM unfinished autobiography.

  “use myself as the center”: JM journal note, undated.

  Shawn called it “some of the best writing”: Ibid., 5/14/70.

  Shawn was “content to wait”: Interview with Charles McGrath.

  “That was an embarrassment to me”: JM interview with NS.

  “that costs two hundred dollars each time”: This and subsequent comments about his finances from JM’s journal notes, circa 1970.

  Mitchell was being “sidetracked” by a variety of things: JM interview with NS.

  “He gave me the impression”: JM journal note, 4/6/77.

  “Find out the year the old barn”: JM journal notes, undated.

  they are “ragweed, Jimson weed, pavement weed”: JM, “Mr. Hunter’s Grave,” UITOH, p. 529.

  “Setting these objects side by side”: Luc Sante in foreword to reissue of JM’s The Bottom of the Harbor, 2008.

  Mitchell thought it “the best restaurant in the city”: JM to Linda Mitchell Lamm, 1/20/64.

  “He had strong feelings about it”: NMS family memoir.

  he came to “believe wholeheartedly”: JM to E. Virgil Conway, 12/11/74.

  “In 1970, James Cameron”: JM unpublished essay on McSorley’s, January 1979.

  “Why don’t you give up farming”: JM to Francis Hayes, 9/3/85.

  “I’d be telling her it was going to get better”: (Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer, 8/16/92.

  Therese at this time “sounded woozy”: Interview with David Crowley.

  “When she was in Marblehead”: JM journal note, undated.

  “She had a loving heart”: Ibid., circa autumn 1980.

  “One of my most haunting memories”: Interview with Elizabeth Mitchell.

  CHAPTER 15: A GHOST IN PLAIN VIEW

  “After she died”: NMS in an undated essay on her mother.

  he held some “unease as a native of his Baptist”: Brendan Gill at JM memorial tribute, 10/7/96.

  “I’m a ghost”: The New York Times, 5/25/96.

  a book that he’d “had to postpone”: JM to Thomas Waring, 6/4/81.

  “It’s just like Trinity—so arrogant”: Interview with Kent Barwick.

  “He knew the history of every”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “He was always very generous”: Interview with Kent Barwick.

  “I am now one of the Commissioners”: JM to Noel Perrin, 9/28/83.

  “I glanced over in the corner”: JM journal note, 1/21/88.

  “I’m saloonable”: Ibid., undated.

  “He just had this look about him”: This and subsequent story from an interview with Ian Frazier.

  “Every day you had a Joe sighting”: Interview with Charles McGrath.

  calling it “the most impressive article”: JM to Jonathan Schell, 2/8/82.

  “it was not bemusement at all”: Interview with Charles McGrath.

  “Joe had a hyperintelligence”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “I am afraid [I am] almost obsessively”: JM to Shelagh and John Metcalf, 12/18/90.

  “a jumble of emotions”: Interview with Elizabeth Mitchell.

  she caught “the note of suppressed panic”: Janet Groth, The Receptionist: An Education at The New Yorker, p. 38.

  “Sometimes I just wish they’d fire me”: Remarks by Roy Wilder, Jr., on JM’s induction into the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame, 5/17/97.

  “lack of productivity [at The New Yorker] is neither”: Gill, Here at The New Yorker, p. 314.

  “Not writing was not that unusual”: Interview with Calvin Trillin.

  “A number of years ago, after brooding”: JM to Addison Potter, 6/23/82.

  “It drove me into the worst slump”: JM to John McNulty, 12/30/45.

  “that bleak and hollow remoteness”: JM to Addison Potter, 6/23/82.

  CHAPTER 16: UP IN THE OLD HOTEL

  “Your letter is one of the first”: JM to Lucretia Edwards, 7/29/93.

  “He was horribly tormented”: Interview with Marie Winn.

  “I read it and I was just astonished”: This and subsequent story from interview with Calvin Trillin.

  “I have in common with Joe”: Interview with Dan Frank.

  “I’d like it to be a kind of surprise”: New York, 2/9/87.

  “the editorial staff was not a party”: William Shawn note to The New Yorker staff, 3/8/85.

  “I tried to explain to him”: JM journal note, 2/12/87.

  “Can you take another year”: Ibid., 10/16/87.

  “I liked him, liked his work”: Mark Singer, “Joe Mitchell’s Secret,” The New Yorker, 2/22/99.

  “Joe, I don’t know how to persuade”: Dan Frank to JM, 5/22/91.

  he was “writing it in his mind”: Interview with Charles McGrath.

  “I haven’t had a book published”: The New York Times, 7/22/92.

  “That city, the one in which”: The New York Times, 8/16/92.

  “I just hope I can hold on”: (Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer, 8/16/92.

  CHAPTER 17: HOMECOMING

  “My name is Mitchell” story: Interview with Sheila McGrath.

  “Joe was a great believer in talismans”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  Telling him “it is still my dream”: Tina Brown to JM, 4/28/94.

  discouraged by “old colleagues retiring”: JM to Peter Shepherd, 12/31/92.

  “There was so much I still wanted”: Singer, “Joe Mitchell’s Secret.”

  the daughters were “grateful most of all”: JM funeral eulogy by Thomas L. Rich Jr., 5/28/96.

  “When you look at his work”: Interview with Dan Frank.

  “I do not know of anyone whose writing”: Addison Potter to JM, 6/17/82.

  “Why didn’t he write more”: Interview with Philip Hamburger.

  “Joe glowed”: Susan DiSesa at JM memorial tribute, 10/7/96.

  SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

  American Caravan IV, Alfred Kreymborg, Lewis Mumford, and Paul Rosenfeld, eds. New York: Macauley, 1931.

  “An Appreciation of Joseph Mitchell,” Raymond J. Rundus, ed. Pembroke Magazine, No. 26, 1994.

  The Art of Fact: A Historical Anthology of Literary Journalism, Kevin Kerrane and Ben Yagoda, eds. New York: Touchstone, 1997.

  Baker, Russell. “Out of Step with the World.” The New York Review of Books, 9/20/01.

  Beller, Thomas. “The Old Man and the Seafood.” The Village Voice, 4/29/05.

  Bernstein, Burton. Thurber: A Biography. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1975.

  Blount, Roy, Jr. “Joe Mitchell’s Secret.” The Atlantic Monthly, August 1992.

  Bosworth, Patricia. Diane Arbus: A Biography. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1984.

  Botsford, Gardner. A Life of Privilege, Mostly: A Memoir. New York: St. Martin’s, 2003.

  Bourke, Angela. Maeve Brennan: Homesick at The New Yorker. New York: Counterpoint, 2004.

  Carduff, Christopher. “Fish-eating, Whiskey, Death & Rebirth.” The New Criterion, November 1992.

  Carrington,
Tucker. “The Grammar of Hard Facts: Joseph Mitchell’s Up in the Old Hotel.” Virginia Quarterly Review, Winter 1996.

  Corey, Mary F. The World Through a Monocle: The New Yorker at Midcentury. Cambridge: Harvard, 1999.

  Cowley, Malcolm. “The Grammar of Facts.” The New Republic, 7/26/43.

  Emery, Edwin. The Press and America: An Interpretive History of the Mass Media, 3rd ed. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1972.

  Gill, Brendan. Here at The New Yorker. New York: Random House, 1975.

  Groth, Janet. The Receptionist: An Education at The New Yorker. Chapel Hill: Algonquin, 2012.

  Hyman, Stanley Edgar. “The Art of Joseph Mitchell.” The New Leader, 12/6/65.

  “Joseph Mitchell.” Reminiscences by various New Yorker writers. The New Yorker, 6/10/96.

  Kinney, Harrison. James Thurber: His Life and Times. New York: Henry Holt, 1995.

  Kluger, Richard. The Paper: The Life and Death of the New York Herald Tribune. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986.

  Life Stories: Profiles From The New Yorker, David Remnick, ed. New York: Random House, 2000.

  Literary Journalism in the Twentieth Century, Norman Sims, ed. New York: Oxford, 1990.

  Kunkel, Thomas. Genius in Disguise: Harold Ross of The New Yorker. New York: Random House, 1995.

  Mehta, Ved. Remembering Mr. Shawn’s New Yorker: The Invisible Art of Editing. Woodstock, N.Y.: Overlook, 1998.

  Mitchell, Joseph. My Ears Are Bent. New York: Sheridan, 1938.

  ———. McSorley’s Wonderful Saloon. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1943.

  ———. Old Mr. Flood. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1948.

  ———. The Bottom of the Harbor. Boston: Little, Brown, 1960.

  ———. Joe Gould’s Secret. New York: Viking, 1965.

  ———. Up in the Old Hotel, and Other Stories. New York: Pantheon, 1992.

  The New American Caravan, Alfred Kreymborg, Lewis Mumford, and Paul Rosenfeld, eds. New York: Macauley, 1929.

  Perrin, Noel. “Paragon of Reporters: Joseph Mitchell.” The Sewanee Review, Spring 1983.

  Rogers, James. “Old Men in Graveyards: Joseph Mitchell’s Dialogue with Seumas O’Kelly.” Canadian Journal of Irish Studies, Spring 2009.

  Ross, Lillian. Here But Not Here: A Love Story. New York: Random House, 1998.

  ———. Reporting Back: Notes on Journalism. Washington: Counterpoint, 2002.

 

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