“I don’t go out for lunch,” Gottlieb told Caro, “but we can have a sandwich at my desk and talk about your book.” He recounts what happened next: “I found myself on my feet with my fist drawn back to punch the guy.” And as for his editor? Caro picked him - longtime Knopf editor, Robert Gottlieb - because every other one Caro’s agent introduced him to took him out to fancy lunches. Once, while typing in the Frederick Lewis Allen Room at the New York Public Library, Caro’s concentration was interrupted by an elderly gentleman with the temerity to ask him to lunch. Lunch upsets Caro for similar reasons, as he notes in his brief new book on his own career (a placeholder, we’re told, for a full-length memoir yet to come). “Lunches,” Caro writes, “were a constant source of irritation to Moses he hated to interrupt his work for them.” If he was compelled to take midday sustenance with company, Moses insisted that a secretary bring him - and his companion - a sandwich. She even hired a barber to come to Moses’s office to trim his hair. His wife, Mary, took over paying the bills and clothes shopping. He gave up bridge, golf, and Sundays with his family. Upon being appointed secretary of state under New York governor Al Smith in the late 1920s, Moses whittled away every distraction in his life. Midway through chapter fifteen of his 1974 book The Power Broker, Robert Caro describes the relentless work ethic of his subject, Robert Moses. Review of Working: Researching, Interviewing, Writing, by Robert Caro (Knopf, 2019).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |