Armchair Travel
Thursday, February 22, 2007
  Jimmy Breslin
A while ago I wrote a series about authors who do not disappoint and through sheer negligence I forgot to include Jimmy Breslin.

My introduction to Breslin's work was a column in a New Tork paper where some police officers on New Year's Day were totalling up the number of homicides for the past year.

There was a guy who got stabbed around eleven o'clock on December 31 and died around 2 a.m. on January 1. The discussion was about which year to assign that murder to.

One of the policemen says it's like when a basketball player takes a shot before the buzzer and then it goes in after. That's Breslin's touch. It's like Patrick Ewing's finger roll.

In one of his books, maybe Forsaking All Others, a guy in New York gets in a fight with his wife and goes out on the front porch and lights a cigarette and then you pan down the street and see this line of tiny illuminations on all the front porches. He is just plain brilliant.

I think it's World Without End, Amen where one character goes to Northern Ireland during the British occupation and the reader gets a really perceptive view of that unhappy time.

But I think Breslin's masterwork is Table Money. It's about an alcoholic New York City policeman. If you're looking for a really good read I absolutely guarantee this work will not disappoint you.

If you know or are an alcoholic you will see a lot of familiar themes treated with the kind of insights that can only come from experience.

Jimmy Breslin, as a writer, reminds me of Curly Howard, as a comedian, rolling around on the floor in the Three Stooges movies: he gives his all, throws himself into it completely.

In Table Money there's this priest employed by the city who checks the records of policemen to see which ones are out on Monday, and this priest zeroes in on the main character, and after a number of episodes, gets him to go into rehabilitation.

The policeman arrives at the rehab center and learns that there is a two-hour wait, and he spies a liquor store in the distance and decides to have one last go.

So he treks out over the highway through the swamp and gets his fancy shoes all muddy and climbs up the embankment and over the guardrail and goes into the liquor store where he meets... (of course) the priest, who says something like, "All drunks are alike." And, of course, far from being contemptuous, he includes himself in this remark.

Jimmy Breslin's books are great reading.
 
Comments:
Old Jimmy one of my all time favorites. I remember reading him in the Daily News when I worked my first job in 8th grade when I worked in a gas station. That's when I read Breslin and Michael Daly the two columnists who are still writing today.
 
One year later. Safe Communities responds to the drug and alcohol abuse at Gonomad.

If you know or are an alcoholic you will see a lot of familiar themes treated with the kind of insights that can only come from experience.

Gonomad's very own Steve Hartshorne... the drunk......arressted for yet another illegal act of possession of drugs... February 24, 2008. Don't forget to add Dangerous Liasons to the list of good reads.Go no mads! Yankee Candle terminated him for a reason!
 
Gee, Anonymous, you seem to have the advantage of me. You know all about me, but I know nothing about you except that you're a coward with poor verbal skills.

You're right, though; Yankee Candle did fire me for a reason -- the same reason they fired everyone else with benefits.

They needed the money to shell out $65,000 a week to a dingdong in $7,000 shoes who promptly ran the company into the ground.
 
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Literary gadfly Stephen Hartshorne writes about books that he finds at flea markets and rummage sales.

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Stephen Hartshorne worked in newspapers and magazines around New England for many years and served as Information Officer in the New Hampshire Senate under Senate President Vesta Roy. He worked as a material handler for nine years at the Yankee Candle Company until the company was taken over by corporate weasels. He is currently the associate editor of GoNOMAD.com, an alternative travel website, which gives him the opportunity to correspond with writers and photographers all over the world. He lives in Sunderland, Massachusetts, with his daughter Sarah, a student at Drew University, and their cat, Dwight D. Eisenmeower. This blog is dedicated to his mom, who made him bookish.

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