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McSorley's wonderful saloon

McSorley's wonderful saloon1943

Joseph Mitchell, Bernard Hoepffner

About this book

New Yorker essayist Mitchell likes to start with an unimportant hero, but collects all the facts, arranges them to give the desired effects, and usually ends by describing the customs of a community. The subject of one portrait "is a brassy little man who has made a living for the last forty years by giving an annual ball for the benefit of himself." Mitchell doesn't present him as anything more than a barroom scrounger; but in telling his story, he also gives a picture of New York sporting life. "King of the Gypsies" sets out to describe the spokesman of 38 gypsy families, but it soon becomes a Gibbon's decline and fall of the American gypsies; and it ends with an apocalyptic vision that is not only comic but also more imaginative than recent novels. Reading some of his portraits a second time, you catch an emotion beneath them that resembles Dickens'.--From Malcolm Cowley, The New Republic.

Details

First published
1943
Publisher
Pantheon Books
Pages
370
ISBN-13
9780375421020
OL Work ID
OL2953347W

Subjects

Eccentrics and eccentricitiesSocial life and customsBars (Drinking establishments)FictionManners and customsAfrican AmericansAmerican AuthorsMcSorley's Old Ale House (New York, N.Y.)

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.