Mitchell is the laureate of old New York. This is the complete collection of his magical essays.
Joseph Mitchell was born near Iona, North Carolina, in 1908, and came to New York City in 1929, when he was twenty-one years old. He eventually found a job as an apprentice crime reporter for The World. He also worked as a reporter and features writer at The Herald Tribune and The World-Telegram before landing at The New Yorker in 1938. "Joe Gould's Secret," which appeared on September 26th 1964, was the last piece Mitchell ever published. He went into work at The New Yorker almost every day for the next thirty-one years and six months but submitted no further writing.
This is a book about New York as it was a long time ago… Mitchell
is interested in the texture of the city. He loves the cops and
bums and old Italian restaurants. After a while you really feel
engrained in the place yourself
*Evening Standard*
Swift, razor-sharp characterisation, narrative suspense and the
sparest, yet most penetrating description
*Evening Standard*
One of the greatest journalists America has produced
*Times Literary Supplement*
What James Joyce might have written had he gone into journalism
*Newsweek*
A poet of the waterfront and a writer of surpassing tales that
captured the unsung and unconventional life of New York and its
denizens
*Independent*
If Borges had been a New Yorker he might have come up with
something like Joe Gould's Secret
*Martin Amis*
Remarkable
*John Fowles*
An original... Civilised, intelligent, kind, humorous
*Doris Lessing*
[Mitchell’s] portrait of old New York is unmatchable
*Big Issue*
It is a teeming confection of the kind of people you wish to meet
in a city, but would never quite have the guts to spend time
with
*Stuart Ever's blog*
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