Like many readers, I expect, I first heard of Kevin Baker following the publication of his 1998 novel,
Dreamland. That book, set in New York City in 1910, was “a wild amusement-park ride on a continuous loop,” to
quote from Thomas Mallon’s review in
The New York Times.
Dreamland, he continued, “is historical fiction at its
most entertaining and, in a number of
spots, most high-handed.”
Kirkus Reviews, meanwhile,
focused on the book’s “generous display” of historical detail:
The various facets of New York and Coney Island, where the ornate park of the title is located, are scribed in intimate detail: the notorious jail The Tombs, City Hall, the Triangle garment factory, immigrant housing, whiskey bars, and strip joints, all are nicely animated. Meanwhile, dozens of characters stroll through these various locales: Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung visit New York and observe the vulgarity of America; Trick the Dwarf tells of the bizarre and the humane at Dreamland -- the dwarfs and the bearded ladies -- which is the most familiar world he knows; and Esther, a garment worker alienated from her immigrant family, takes an active role in the labor movement. Also on hand are Gyp the Blood, a small-time criminal; Big Tim, the Tammany politico, plus Kid Twist and Sadie and Clara.
Before it was
engulfed by flames in 1911, Dreamland was one of Coney Island’s most grandiose, and in some ways most eccentric, public entertainments. Baker’s own
Dreamland was hardly less ambitious, and made me hungry for more of his work. Fortunately, the author has satisfied my appetite on a fairly regular basis ever since, releasing
Paradise Alley in 2002,
Strivers Row (featuring a fictionalized Malcolm X) in 2006 and, in 2013,
The Big Crowd -- which
was finally
issued in paperback this fall.
A fairly exceptional New York history blog called The Bowery Boys
explains
that
The Big Crowd turns on the mystery of the 1941 “suicide” of
Abe Reles, aka Kid Twist, a successful mob hit man who died, tumbling from a hotel room window, while in police custody -- and in the midst of testifying
against some of the city’s most notorious gangsters. However, the emotional center of
The Big Crowd is largely dominated by Charlie O’Kane, a bigger-than-life character based openly on
William O’Dwyer, a former district attorney who won national celebrity through his prosecution of organized-crime figures, and was elected in 1946 as New York City’s 100th mayor -- only to later be brought down by controversy having to do with police
corruption.
The Bowery Boys opines that “while their biographies are nearly the same … O’Kane is a lustier, more mysterious figure, escaping America and becoming an almost godlike figure [and a U.S. ambassador] in Mexico City.” It’s to Mexico, then, that Charlie’s much-younger brother, Tom, with the Brooklyn D.A.’s office, goes in the early 1950s to ask the former mayor questions about his possible involvement in Reles’ demise. His hope is to stand up for this brother he once idolized and clear Charlie of wrongdoing. But Baker’s yarn offers no such easy satisfactions. What he finds in Mexico City is a sibling trying to put his best face forward, but haunted by the troubles and compromises of his past. Charlie is also contending with an estranged and headstrong second wife, Slim Sadler -- a quondam model increasingly dissatisfied with her Mexican exile -- for whom Tom O’Kane has long had feelings, but who’s presently carrying on too publicly with a matador. Reviewing
The Big Crowd for
The New York Times, author Scott Turow
pointed out that “All the O’Kanes -- Charlie and Tom and even Slim -- are patterned after real people: the former New York mayor William O’Dwyer; the fashion model he married while in office,
Sloan [or Sloane] Simpson; and O’Dwyer’s brother,
Paul, an activist lawyer who was once elected City Council president. Baker is clearly trying to unravel the enigma
of how a figure like William O’Dwyer could fly into office on the wings of hope only to find himself sunk in scandal.”
(Left) Author Kevin Baker.
(Photograph by Nina Subin.)
Accomplishing that task leads Baker to skip about through the early 20th century, and across borders, as he retraces Charlie O’Kane’s rise to power, the uneasy relationships he establishes with powerful and corrupting figures in New York City, the costs of his ambition and the depths of treachery
to which some people will sink to exploit his weaknesses.
I had the opportunity recently to address questions, via e-mail, to Kevin Baker about his latest novel, and didn’t hesitate to take it. We discussed his interests in historical fiction, the rich immigrant story of William O’Dwyer and his brother, crime and social optimism in post-World War II Manhattan, and a great deal more.
J. Kingston Pierce: You weren’t born in New York City, but rather
in New Jersey. Yet after attending Columbia University there, you never left. Was there something about old Gotham that made it easier for you to imagine your future there than anyplace else?
Kevin Baker: Actually, it was much more the New York
of the time, 1970s New York, that drew me. The city had many problems then, but it was also a very exciting, vibrant place to be; a very cheap place for an aspiring writer or artist to live.
I had ties to the city already. My mother was born in Washington Heights, my father on Fordham Road. I had some idea of what it was like already, and I couldn’t wait to go live there.
The love of its history only came later, as I began to know, and wonder how it had come to be what it was.
JKP: Your official bios all seem to leave a
huge gap between your earning a degree in political science and your becoming a novelist. Can you briefly explain what happened during those “lost years”? Did you ever use that political science degree?
KB: Hardly! Columbia was (and is) a great, great school. Going there was one of the best
decisions I ever made, but I regret that poli sci degree. I would have been better off, I think, majoring in straight-out history, or English. But thanks in part to the college’s core curriculum, I was exposed to any number of great thinkers and writers I had no inkling of when I went there as an 18-year-old -- which is why the core is so important.
No, the “gap” just reflects my doing whatever sort of work I could -- largely freelance writing, copy-editing, proofreading -- while I tried to write and sell fiction. I began writing five pages a day on a novel the week I started college, thinking I would surely publish my first book before I graduated. Instead, it took me 15 years before I sold a lick of it!
JKP: I’m not sure that
E.L. Doctorow opened up these floodgates with
Ragtime (1975), but there are certainly many historical novels nowadays featuring real-life characters in either starring or secondary roles. Do you think this
is a valuable trend? And are there risks that novelists run in featuring historical figures in their fiction?
KB: That’s a very good point, I think Doctorow did indeed open up the floodgates with
Ragtime. He’s really been the father of modern historical fiction, I think. One thing I love about his take on the genre is that he’s completely unapologetic about any of it. He feels the fiction writer should write about whatever he pleases, and I think he’s right about that.
This gets back to the whole argument over just what “historical fiction” is, and I think we’re very wrong to separate it, and ghettoize it as we do in this country. It’s just as legitimate as any other form of fiction, and in fact through much of history it’s been the
dominant form of fiction.
The ancient Greeks didn’t keep writing about, say, Odysseus, as “historical fiction,” the Romans didn’t write about Aeneas as historical fiction. These were central, founding myths of their societies, and assessing them, and reassessing
them was a critical element in how they debated what
their society was, and what it should be.
Sure, the genre’s been mightily abused over the years through bodice rippers, and bad detective stories, and hero-worshipping … but what form of literature hasn’t been? Why shouldn’t we be able to write stories about prominent, or simply intriguing, public figures of the past?
Naturally, one needs to think it out, because as the famous
L.P. Hartley quote goes, the past’s another country, they do things differently there. I would never have a real-life figure saying or doing something in opposition to all that we know about him, or get too far off in flights of fancy about what he might do.
But then, we all paint from life. Why is it legitimate to, say, write a contemporary novel based on one’s father, but not to write a historical novel based on a founding father?
JKP: There’s always a tendency, when writing a novel based on extensive research, to include as much of that research as possible in the finished product. How do you combat such a tendency in your own fiction-writing?
KB: I don’t combat it very well! I find that’s always difficult -- and I think that’s where
Mr. Doctorow and I differ in our approaches. I was told by one of his former students that he advises, “Do as little research as you can get away with,” when writing historical fiction, and certainly that works for him.
For me, I find it’s always the things I wasn’t looking for that say so much, and that’s why I’m happy to do so much research. For instance, in this case I had no idea that Sloane Simpson, the real-life second wife of
William O’Dwyer, actually learned how to bullfight while they were in Mexico.
Or the whole story of
William McCormack, the “Mr. Big” in the book. He was a fascinating individual, and he wielded enormous power in New York, controlling the largest port in the world with an iron fist. But he was virtually unknown by the public in his own time, and is pretty much forgotten today.
Characters and details like that are not something you even necessarily know are out there when you start, and they become vital to the work. They not only tell you so much about a time and place, they also fill in all the gaps, and complete the puzzle of your characters.
But I do tend to get carried away with it, which is where I have to fight myself. And fortunately, I’ve always had terrific editors to help me, in this case Andrea Schulz and Nicole Angeloro, at Houghton Mifflin.
JKP: So let’s talk about Mayor O’Dwyer. When did you first become interested in his checkered career? And what was it you found most interesting about him?
KB: I first became interested in him when I discovered, many years ago, that he was the
(much) older brother of
Paul O’Dwyer, who was such a political icon in New York
for so many years: the last fighting liberal, always taking on one cause or another, no matter what the odds.
(Left) Mayor William O’Dwyer
And when I learned that William O’Dwyer had more or less had to live in Mexico in exile for years, I thought how can it be that Paul had this disgraced older brother? Accused of some very serious things -- of having helped to kill probably the greatest mob witness of all time; of being a tool
of the mob, of the political machines when they were at their most venal and corrupt. What sort of conflicts must there have been there?
I went into this initially to tell a story of two brothers. The fact that the real-life Paul O’Dwyer would never say a word against his brother in public, always maintained his innocence, only whetted my appetite.
What I found most interesting about William O’Dwyer was that he has this great immigrant story behind him, somebody who came here as a seminary dropout with no money, worked his way up as a
hod carrier, a cop on the beat. Went to law school at night, became a district attorney, even a war hero. He comes back from World War II and gets elected mayor, marries the hottest fashion model in the country after his wife dies … and then it all unravels.
It’s the classic immigrant story -- all gone wrong.
JKP: Has this novel made you reassess your views on O’Dwyer?
KB: He was much deeper, much harder to read than I imagined. It was not so much that he was a deeply complicated man -- because he wasn’t -- but that he did a great deal of dissembling throughout his life. You peel back layer after layer, but he remains evasive, and I suspect he did even to those closest to him.
There is, I would say, something ultimately false about the man. Something slightly fabricated. One of the themes I tried to get across in the book is that he almost seemed like a cinematic creation -- a sort of cardboard cutout of the crusading D.A., the all-American boy, the immigrant boy
made good.
And yet, under any close examination, it all crumbles away. He was constantly erecting façades of himself, I think, to shield his real self from the public, from the people closest to him, his wife and his brothers, and I think in the end he may have believed in those make-believe O’Dwyers himself.
JKP: You brought up “the classic immigrant story.” Because New York was very much a city of immigrants, you’ve touched on that experience in all your novels set there, I think. But
The Big Crowd really exploits the subject. How did you intend to use the history of immigration as a theme in exploring New York City’s mid-20th-century development?
KB: Well, it’s somewhat different from the earlier, 19th-century waves of immigration, because now the Irish, especially, have a solid foothold on the city.
Previously, in books like
Paradise Alley and
Dreamland, I was writing about how Irish and Jewish immigrants came here and had to really fight their way up with nothing. By the time Charlie O’Kane gets here, a few years before World War I, there’s already a power structure, there are very strong Irish political machines in Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx.
He has to sort of plug himself into it -- which is no easy thing, but not quite the life-or-death struggle being an immigrant was.
Yet at the same time, it’s a moment when the old Irish-dominated machines were fading. They had been what
[W.E.B.] Du Bois calls “folkways,” means to help the Irish survive, and fight their way into the power structure of this country.
But as Charlie comes to power himself, the machines are losing their reason for being. The country’s gotten rich, there’s more opportunity, there’s a social welfare state in place. People can go to college, they have Social Security, they don’t need the machine to get them a job, or give them
the proverbial turkey on Christmas.
Now, all the other immigrants want in, as well. New York by this time is no longer a city that can just be run by a few men in a room, and it never will be again. It can no longer be run just on some understanding between a few powerful politicians and businessmen, maybe a mob boss or two.
We’re all Americans now -- and everybody wants in.
JKP: As you said before, this is very much a novel about brothers, two quite different people with different approaches to life, who wind up supporting and disappointing each other. What was it about the relationship between Tom and Charlie O’Kane that you found most curious or illuminating? And did the story of these brothers unroll differently, during the course of your writing, than you’d originally expected it would?
KB: It was somewhat more complicated than I had originally envisioned -- which I think is
good.
I think a lot of the dialogue they’re having is about what it means to be a moral person. How do you get the power to do anyone any good, without first getting corrupted? What do you owe to your family and friends, and what do you owe to the people all around you, to the city in general?
Tom is much more the idealist, at least at first, and Charlie is trying to show him practical ways to get power, and to do good with it. But you know, it’s so easy after awhile to confuse what you’re doing for the people, and what you’re doing for yourself.
JKP: What do you see as the role of Slim Sadler in this novel?
KB: Slim is based closely on
Sloane Simpson, who was a fascinating individual, somebody who came from old money and very high society. Her father was a Rough Rider with Teddy Roosevelt, one of her mother’s family was a Founding Father, they had cattle empires, and banking empires.
But then her father lost all his money, and she had to go make a living as a model. And she was very good at it, she was considered a great actress on the runway. She moved in very high circles in New York society, and really loved that life.
She was 23 years younger than O’Dwyer when they met, and she became his second wife, with all of the complications that such circumstances usually entail. She was
always flirtatious, and gregarious, and he was very jealous, and that just aggravated everything.
(Right) Sloane Simpson in Life,
May 29, 1950
Then, down in Mexico, she was very unhappy in this sort of straitened, exiles’ existence they were living. She loved the country, and she loved the culture, but she couldn’t stand being boxed up with this jealous, bitter old man, and she started acting out -- learning to bullfight, having affairs.
The real Sloane did not do all the things I have the fictional Slim Sadler doing in the novel, which I feel a little bad about because I really liked the real Sloane. She sounds like she was a remarkable person, a real fighter and a hell of a lot of fun. But she said about herself, “I’ve had the morals of an alley cat” -- she really did have a penchant for getting into trouble.
I think what she represented to William O’Dwyer, and to both O’Kane brothers in the book, was the promise of America. She was the golden girl, from money and position, and to get her was to attain the dream.
But then of course, when you do get her, you find out the dream’s not all it’s cracked up to be, and it’s a bit of a lie, and all you can do is worry about losing it.
JKP: The Big Crowd makes postwar New York seem like a particularly optimistic place. Or is that your romantic side coming through?
KB: Oh, I think it was a very optimistic place! You have to understand, New York was the only great world city that had not been bombed or occupied during the war. It had emerged, almost overnight, as the leading city on the world scene, replacing the old European capitals as the leader in art, and literature, and fashion.
It was absolutely dominant economically -- far and away the world’s leading financial center, the country’s largest wholesale and retail center, with over a million manufacturing jobs still. Something like 40 percent of the nation’s commerce came through its port. It had easily the highest buildings in the world, the largest population of any city, anywhere.
It was incredibly vibrant, incredibly exciting -- and incredibly cheap. It was still a great middle-class and working-class town, where you didn’t have to have a lot of money to experience all sorts of things: go hear the best jazz in the world, see some of the greatest art -- watch Willie
Mays play baseball.
That scene I have in the book, where
Toots Shor, the legendary saloonkeeper, walks arm-in-arm down the middle of his
restaurant one night with Babe Ruth and Jack Dempsey on one arm, and Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby on the other,
that really happened. And Toots Shor’s was not some exclusive nightclub, it was
where pretty much anyone could go, and did, and I think it was extremely exciting for people to be in the middle of this, and see everything that was going on.
At the same time, there were still people who were excluded from the big party, still restrictions on all sorts of people, that would have to be addressed. Black people still weren’t allowed into most of the leading hotels and restaurants, women were still second-class citizens, gays and lesbians were still outcasts. Columbia, like all the Ivy League schools, had quotas limiting how many Jews could be admitted. Italian-Americans, such a young
Mario Cuomo, could not get an interview with white-shoe law firms.
So there was all that which needed to be dealt with, and there were fissures of corruption spreading all underneath this lovely structure. And the men at the top were still refusing to deal with it, still clinging to their own power, and enriching themselves.
JKP: At the same time as this is a book about siblings, and politics, and familial
relationships, it’s a story about urban crime. Were there depths or misconceptions of the New York underworld of that period that you were hoping to address?
KB: The misconception about organized crime is that it’s generally not that organized,
or as powerful as people make it out to be. But this was the period when the crime families in New York had more political influence than they ever had before, or ever would again.
Historically, gangsters had been controlled and used by the politicians in New York. But with Prohibition, the mob made so much money that, once
[Mayor Fiorello] La Guardia left office [in 1945], they were all set up to turn the tables. Now, it was the gangsters who provided the money that kept
Tammany
Hall going, and they called the shots.
This didn’t last, and in a place the size of New York City there are always competing, countervailing political forces and influences. But while it did, the criminals did tremendous, long-term economic damage to the city. For instance, they really brutalized and impoverished the tens of thousands of men who worked on the waterfront, and they stole so much that they pretty much wrecked the old port.
JKP: As someone who loved
Dreamland, I was delighted to see the character of Kid Twist pop up again in
The Big Crowd. But this isn’t the adult version of that criminal tyke from
Dreamland, is it?
KB:Thank you! But no, this is not the same Kid Twist.
It was the longtime habit of New York gangsters to “honor” one another by taking on the name of some particularly famous, dead mobster. Hence, Arthur Flegenheimer was rechristened “Dutch Schultz” after a previous thug.
There were, incredibly enough,
two Kid Twists, and they both met their end on Coney Island.
JKP: The “Kid Twist” in
The Big Crowd is, in fact,
Abe Reles, a mob enforcer who eventually became a government witness against
Murder, Inc. and died mysteriously in a fall from the
Half
Moon Hotel on Coney Island. Despite a grand jury concluding that Reles had perished accidentally, there seems every reason to believe that he was murdered by his former gangland pals. From your research, what do you think happened to Abe Reles?
KB: Oh, I think he was definitely pushed! The idea that he was trying to escape, or play some prank, as the police speculated at the time, is just ludicrous. Reles was a seriously ill man, and he was desperately afraid for his life. There is no way that he was trying to lower himself down from a ninth-story window on a set of tied-up bed sheets -- something I make plain in the novel.
He was a terrible little man, a top assassin for Murder, Inc., the legendary Brooklyn mob, who was thought to have killed over 60 men during his career.
Murder, Inc. was a sort of early triumph of niche marketing in the underworld. These were gangsters, Jewish and Italian, who hired themselves out to do hits for bigger
mobs, all over the country. The advantage of this was that the target, especially in another city, would never see you
coming.
They were truly ruthless, horrible men. But they were very much small-fry -- just low-life killers. O’Dwyer, as D.A. of Brooklyn, broke them up. Thanks to Reles, the most successful mob witness in history, he sent seven members of Murder, Inc. to “the Dance Hall” -- the electric chair -- up at Sing
Sing, including
“Lepke” Buchalter, to this day the only mob leader ever executed in the United States.
Reles gives invaluable testimony against these individuals, his old friends, and clears up dozens of murder cases around the country. But then, just as he’s about to testify against
Albert Anastasia, who really is a big deal, the muscle William McCormack uses to control the longshoremen’s union and thereby the Port of New York … out the window Reles goes. Despite the fact that he was being held in a wing of the Half Moon Hotel,
out on Coney Island, with a 17-man, ’round-the-clock police guard, behind an iron door.
As everyone wanted to know at the time, how could this have happened? Who did it? Was it crooked cops? The other four mob witnesses Reles was being held at the Half Moon with? Who ordered it? The mob? McCormack? O’Dwyer?
Again, there’s something very phony about everyone’s role, all through it. This case became the heart of the
Kefauver
Hearings, the first, televised corruption hearings in history, and they held Americans riveted to their brand-new television sets -- and helped wreck O’Dwyer’s reputation.
Was he involved? Who did it? It’s the greatest mystery in the annals of the mob.
I offer a solution that is very closely based on the real facts of the case and, I think, holds up pretty well. Read it and find out!
JKP: I know you’re penning fiction here, but is it really credible that a district attorney would assign Tom O’Kane to investigate his own brother in relation to Reles’ “suicide”?
KB: Yes, that does strain credulity, I’ll admit. But I wanted Tom to have some real power
over his brother, maybe even life-or-death, in this matter. I wanted the stakes to matter.
And, I wanted to introduce the legendary Manhattan D.A. of the time,
Frank Hogan. I see this book as the first of a planned “City of Gold” trilogy focusing on New York in the 1950s, with Tom investigating three of its iconic scandals: the Reles murder and waterfront corruption;
college basketball point-shaving cases; and the
quiz show fix.
JKP: I have to admit, as I was reading
The Big Crowd I kept remembering Robert Penn Warren’s
All the King’s Men. Is Charlie O’Kane your Willie Stark?
KB: Thank you, that’s a tremendous compliment! But where Penn’s Willie Stark, being based on
Huey Long, is much more a force of nature, someone whose ambition and ruthlessness puts him on a fatal course, Charlie O’Kane is much more a hesitant character, a man whose fears about the terrible nature of the world as he saw it in the Depression and World War II, whose self-doubts and whose vanity leaves him prey to being manipulated by more pitiless, determined men.
JKP: I was intrigued to see, in a
short post you put together for the blog My Book, the Movie, that you’d like to see
Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston in the role of Charlie O’Kane. That would be wonderful casting, I agree. But have you actually seen any Hollywood interest in
The Big Crowd? Have filmmakers taken much of an interest in your previous books?
KB: I think Bryan Cranston could play anything, and particularly a politician, after seeing him not only in
Breaking Bad, but also in that wonderful Robert Schenkkan play about LBJ,
All the Way.
I haven’t heard much about [Hollywood interest in]
The Big Crowd yet, just a few murmurings. I’ve had some more serious bites regarding
Dreamland. But in general, I’d say all my books would be better as TV shows than movies, because they take place over time, and they’re pretty
intense investigations of specific times, and conflicts, and crimes. And I’d be fine with that, I love what’s going on with TV right now.
JKP: What other novels do you think do an especially fine job of illuminating New York City’s history?
KB: Oh, there are so many! My favorite Doctorow is
World’s Fair, although I also loved
The Waterworks and
Billy Bathgate. Peter Quinn wrote a great novel about the draft riots,
Banished Children of Eve, that everyone should read. I greatly enjoyed the old Louis Auchincloss novel
The Embezzler. I’m sure I’m forgetting some great ones …
JKP: And I’d be remiss if I didn’t ask: What are you writing next?
KB: Right now, I’m finishing up a history of New York City baseball, tentatively entitled
The New York Game, for Pantheon, which has been very patient about it. Then, I’m writing a history of the United States between the world wars, for Houghton Mifflin, so it’s real segues into
non-fiction for a time.
But I have many more novel ideas, a couple of which I noted above, and I suspect I’ll be returning constantly to New York and its past.
ALSO CHECK OUT: A video profile of Mayor William O’Dwyer.
Labels: fiction, interview, J. Kingston Pierce