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I don’t know about you, but Cheever gets to me. Maybe I’m a sucker for beautiful melancholy or melancholy beauty. I don’t know which the following passage is, but it always had a kind of power over me. The first words of Bullet Park:

‘Paint me a small railroad stattion, then, ten minutes before dark.”

Paint me: it suddenly occurred to me that he was addressing this to someone specific, to a painter. To Edward Hopper, the Cheever of the visual arts?

Because what follows is pure Hopper through the lense of Cheever:

Remember, the station ten minutes before dark. Ten minutes all too exactly!

“The architecture of the station is oddly informal, gloomy but unserious, and mostly resembles a pergola, cottage or summer house although this is a climate of harsh winters. The lamps along the platform burn with a nearly palpable plaintiveness. The setting seems in some way to be at the heart of the matter.”

The heart of the matter! Not an accident, I think more likely a conscious tribute to that other master of melancholy: Graham Greeene, in the title of (I believe) his greatest, indeed his most beautifully melancholy work.

And “the lamps along the platform…”. Kills me The palpable plaintiveness! Just so. I feel it all too often. For a while after my intitial enchantment with Cheever, I allowed the disenchantment, the alcoholism of the journals, etc. make me think he was “merely” the poet of the hangover. But he’s so much more. His hangovers like Greene’s are painfully spirtual, or rather trials of the spirit. Agony of the soul that no Alka-seltzer can salve.

“You wake in a Pullman bedroom at three a.m. in a city the name of which you do not know and may never discover. A man stands on a platform with a child on his shoulders. They are waving good bye to some traveler, but what is the child doing up so late, and why is the man crying?”

Unbearable. But unbelievably beautiful in some sad way too: the masterful compression of that station platform tableau. A novel in itself.

And as if to numb us to the pain he draws back:

“On a siding beyond the platform there is a lighted dining car where a waiter sits alone at a table adding up his accounts. Beyond this is a water tower and beyond this is a well-lighted and empty street.”

Whew.The journey through the hell of melancholy is over. You’ve come to the “well lighted and empty street”. A tirubte to “A Clean Well Lighted Place”? A respite from darkness and the sorrow of human being.

I don’t know. I think it’s somehow beautiful if only in its truth.

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2 Comments

charlie finch:

As Holmes says to Watson, on the risks of the city versus the country, “If we could fly over those country houses and lift off the roofs, the crimes we would see!” (I’m paraphrasing). I just reread Cheever’s collected stories and dipped into his diaries (always a bracer). The melancholy is palpable, seductive and oppressive. It bears remarking that our USA nanny state continues to snuff out the spaces of these private longings, though more egregious public crimes, like office shootings beat against that world of signs and warnings. Cheever’s war with his family continues (they have turned his sins into an industry), with Susan’s proclamation of her lusts and addictions. Meanwhile, Cheever’s warrior wife Mary, walks on, at age 91, recently honored by the Ossining Public Library. Speaking of private longings, what’s with Maureen Dowd’s constant winks at Obama and his bodyman Reggie Love? What’s Love, Barack’s Huma Abedin, got to do with it? just asking

Jul 30, 2008 - 8:24 am Bill Altreuter:

I suspect that the station that you and I both have in our minds eye is the same one. I haven’t thought about it in years, but the architecture of the Bay Shore station did resemble a pergola. And ten minutes before dark is probably when I often saw it.

What I have always liked about Cheever is that he captures the feeling of compulsion that drives his characters lives without ever doing more than describing what they do. They are driven, and we feel that.

Jul 30, 2008 - 2:20 pm

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Ron Rosenbaum

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book cover BUY The Shakespeare Wars
Random House, September 2006


Electrifying. A spectacular book. —Cynthia Ozick


…a thrilling personal confrontation…The Shakespeare Wars comes to us in waves of new revelations —Billy Collins, former U.S. poet laureate


Acclaimed journalist Ron Rosenbaum wrestles with the weightiest issues of Shakespeare studies in a down-to-earth manner that readers will applaud. —Publisher’s Weekly


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A remarkable journey by one of the most original journalists and writers of our time. —David Remnick A work of importance and fascination. —George Steiner, the [U.K.] Observer A provacative work of cultural history that is as compelling as it is thoughtful, as readable as it is smart..Mr. Rosenbaum has made an important contribution to our understanding not just of Hitler, but of the cultural processes by which we try to come to terms with history as well… He has written an exciting, lucid book. —Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times Intriguing, thought provoking and intelligent. —Ian Kershaw in The Guardian [U.k.] Brilliant…restlessly probing and deeply intelligent. —Lance Morrow, Time In Explaining Hitler, profound historical questions spring urgently and hauntingly to life. —Sam Tanenhaus Cultural criticism served up as riveting narrative history —Marc Fisher The Washington Post
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Ron Rosenbaum is one of the great masters of the metaphysical detective story, a nonfiction writer in the spirit of Borges, Nabokov and Poe. —Errol Morris (director of The Fog of War) Few journalists inspire the kind of cult following that Rosenbaum has —Scott McLemee Newsday I plan on hanging Ron Rosenbaum’s ‘marriage proposal’ [column] in a prominent place. Should my husband begin to take me for granted, he will be reminded that I am not without options. —Rosanne Cash You made me look like a f_____g lunatic. —Oliver Stone ALSO AVAILABLE (an anthology of others’ work): Those Who Forget the Past: The Question of Anti-Semitism Bi-weekly Spectator columnist at Slate

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