The New Yorker -
6 Jun 2017 16:35
In the early spring of 1985, after failing miserably at the first and only regular job that I have ever tried to hold, I left New York City to return to the Southern town where I'd gone to college, and was there rescued from depression, or worse, by a French lady I knew who used to party with liveried monkeys. I was barely twenty-five, and more or less a virgin--a nice Jewish boy from Long Island who still secretly thought that smoking Merits was pretty decadent. She was well into her seventh de...
Share this Article
Comment on this Article
Please to comment