home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0638>
- <title>
- May 16, 1994: Books:Mandarin with a Knife
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 16, 1994 "There are no devils...":Rwanda
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 84
- Mandarin with a Knife
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Murray Kempton dissects the heroes and scoundrels of his time
- </p>
- <p>By Charles Michener
- </p>
- <p> Could any other tabloid newspaperman have been found on a New
- York City sidewalk in the middle of the afternoon, puffing a
- pipe and surveying the passing scene while listening to the
- music of Henry Purcell? It was Monday, the one working day he
- wasn't on deadline, and Murray Kempton was happy to slip off
- the earphones of his portable CD player and muse about Rebellions,
- Perversities and Main Events (Times Books; 570 pages; $27.50),
- a new collection of his writings.
- </p>
- <p> Comprising 70-odd pieces from such journals as the New York
- Post, the New York Review of Books, the New Republic and the
- current home of his column, New York Newsday, Kempton's book
- calls forth a cavalcade of heroes and scoundrels of the past
- 50 years and more--among them Benito Mussolini, F.D.R., Richard
- Nixon, Bessie Smith, Karl Marx, Goya, Roy Cohn, Cassius Clay
- and one Stella Valenza, a housewife on trial for "hiring three
- mechanics to rid her of her husband, Felice." To Kempton, the
- insignificant deserves as much attention as the momentous; he
- gives the auctioning of Marilyn Monroe's address book the same
- careful scrutiny as the postcommunism paralysis in Russia. Altogether,
- Rebellions provides proof of the conclusion reached long ago
- by its author's many admirers: Murray Kempton possesses one
- of the most penetrating minds in American journalism.
- </p>
- <p> He speaks in tones as courtly as those of the English Baroque
- composer whose anthems he had clamped to his ears. At 75, wire-thin,
- white-haired and dressed in his working uniform of gray suit,
- white shirt and red tie, he more than ever fits Russell Baker's
- description of him as "the wise Episcopal bishop." Raised in
- a distinguished Old South family fallen on hard times, Kempton
- might be describing himself when he writes of the civil rights
- leader A. Philip Randolph: "His only vanity is his manners."
- </p>
- <p> Irony--for which he has perfect pitch--is his weapon of
- choice: "Alger Hiss always made his debut escorted by the Gods:
- He came to Washington with a reference from Felix Frankfurter
- and he went to Lewisburg ((prison)) with a reference to Frank
- Costello." In the sentence that opens an essay about one of
- his favorite subjects, the tragedy (or comedy) of the self-deluded
- rebel, Kempton dryly sums up another progressive hero: "Paul
- Robeson's was a career whose rise and fall were both tethered
- to his identity as a man of conspicuous color." Kempton's asperity
- can be hilarious. Of the proprietor of Umbertos Clam House in
- New York's Little Italy, he writes, "Matthew Ianniello has been
- lost to Mulberry Street and on long-term lease to the federal
- prison system since 1986, and where are the scungilli of yesteryear?"
- </p>
- <p> What really distinguishes these pieces is their sorrow--particularly
- for the plight of American blacks and society's losers. Kempton
- measures leaders by their capacity for compassion, summing up
- the greatness of Martin Luther King Jr. with this pronouncement:
- "A great man is one who knows that he was not put on earth to
- be part of a process through which a child can be hurt." His
- eye for the telling detail is never more acute than when rendering
- a scene of loss. Here he is describing Jacqueline Kennedy and
- her family entering St. Matthew's Cathedral at J.F.K.'s funeral:
- "And the children in their sunny pale blue coats began walking
- with their mother up the stairs, the little boy stumbling only
- at the vestibule, and then they were gone."
- </p>
- <p> A columnist of the left, Kempton is anything but doctrinaire.
- He sympathizes as easily with Richard Nixon during his troubles
- over the buying of a Manhattan co-op as he excoriates Alger
- Hiss for failing to offer State Department protection to an
- American victim of Stalin. His prescience is often uncanny.
- Writing of Ronald Reagan as Governor of California in 1968,
- he could have been summing up Reagan's presidency 20 years later:
- "For touching a people who want to forget ugly problems, no
- politician equals the one who has already forgotten them himself."
- </p>
- <p> Magisterial in style, Kempton has the mandarin's essential modesty.
- Sitting now over coffee, he is asked about the trials of continuing
- to put out a column four times a week, and he says: "The thing
- about writing at my age is you know when you're bad. But the
- thing about a column is you don't have any excuse for not writing."
- The columns have never been widely syndicated, and Kempton has
- shunned the limelight of TV punditry. Nor has he ever been granted
- the prestige of writing for, say, the New York Times. He does
- not regret it. "I like writing for the tabloids," he says. "I
- like being not over-conscious about the importance of what I
- say. Since, of course, there's very little importance to what
- you do say."
- </p>
- <p> That, in Kempton's case, is untrue. When he goes on to remark,
- "There are very few columnists the insides of whose heads are
- lastingly interesting," he identifies exactly what gives this
- feast of Kemptoniana its permanent appeal.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-