On December 27, 2016, I posted a story about returning to the Gotham Book Mart site, reconfigured after the legendary literary hangout lost its lease. Its proprietor, Andreas Brown, a man wise to books, theater, and the theater of books, died this week at age 86. Among many discoveries, he was onto Jimmy Kimmel, telling me, he’s going to be a big star. With some tweaking, I am remembering here Andreas Brown and his place among diamonds.
“That’s our trouble,” said my friend Roger Friedman, “everything used to be something else.” I had just told him about meeting my brothers and their families for the third Chanukah candle, 13 relatives in all, at a glatt kosher restaurant called Taam Tov in the Diamond District, on the very site of the legendary Gotham Book Mart. On November 17, 1986, my book, Kerouac’s Spontaneous Poetics, one of the first full-scale studies on the iconic beat poet and novelist, was celebrated here. A sign, “Wise Men Fish Here,” marked the spot, a literary emporium on a bejeweled street. The James Joyce Society met here. Among many other book parties, a reissue of Junkie was feted here too, in 1977. Carl Solomon and Patti Smith attended, honoring William S. Burroughs’ work. Poet Allen Ginsberg, who had clerked here back in the day, snapped my picture.
The sign is now gone; the door, a cheap glass job that blends in with the commerce of the street, leads to a humble dining space adorned with Middle East tableaux. My family sat at a table overlooking 47th street. Many cars were parked illegally, but the police were not ticketing. Mountains of food: falafel and pilaf and kasha and stuffed cabbage, chicken, lamb, beef kebabs, arrived on generous platters, a delicious heimish feast.
Max (almost 2) sat atop a table making finger puppets with his aunt Jane. Jonathan announced he was applying to medical school. Paulina made Dean’s List. And newlyweds Lindsay and Noah showed off iphone shots of their new arrival, a fleecy white puppy. The kids are older now, and their dreams have shifted. We paid homage to our parents, Holocaust survivors, who would be proud to see their offspring proliferating and prospering. I engaged the children with stories of the Gotham’s starry past, a literary history fast faded, and even harder to imagine in our world today.
R.I.P. Andreas Brown, a rare gem.
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