From Sobaski's Stairway to the Irish Club: Lester Goran's Pittsburgh

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FROM SOBASKI’S STAIRWAY TO THE IRISH CLUB: LESTER GORAN’S PITTSBURGH Matthew Asprey Gear Macquarie University, Sydney Lester Goran, Miami 2008. Photo © Matthew Asprey Gear ABSTRACT: For more than half a century Lester Goran (19282014) wrote fiction set in the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This paper explores Goran’s continuing attempts to map this evolving urban space in novels such as The Paratrooper of Mechanic Avenue (1960) and Bing Crosby’s Last Song (1998). Passages in these novels are closely examined in relation to Pittsburgh’s postwar ‘urban renewal’ and the expansion of the University of Pittsburgh. Additional insights are drawn from an extensive 2008 interview with the author. Goran’s imaginative recreations of Sobaski’s Stairway (a fictionalised Hill District) and the Irish neighbourhood of Oakland constitute an unjustly ignored trove of postwar American urban realism. *

Transcript of From Sobaski's Stairway to the Irish Club: Lester Goran's Pittsburgh

FROM  SOBASKI’S  STAIRWAY  TO  THE  IRISH  CLUB:    

LESTER  GORAN’S  PITTSBURGH    

Matthew  Asprey  Gear  Macquarie  University,  Sydney  

 

 Lester  Goran,  Miami  2008.  Photo  ©  Matthew  Asprey  Gear  

 ABSTRACT:  For  more  than  half  a  century  Lester  Goran  (1928-­‐2014)  wrote  fiction  set  in  the  city  of  

Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania.  This  paper  explores  Goran’s  continuing  attempts  to  map  this  evolving  urban  

space  in  novels  such  as  The  Paratrooper  of  Mechanic  Avenue  (1960)  and  Bing  Crosby’s  Last  Song  (1998).  

Passages  in  these  novels  are  closely  examined  in  relation  to  Pittsburgh’s  postwar  ‘urban  renewal’  and  

the  expansion  of  the  University  of  Pittsburgh.  Additional  insights  are  drawn  from  an  extensive  2008  

interview  with  the  author.  Goran’s  imaginative  recreations  of  Sobaski’s  Stairway  (a  fictionalised  Hill  

District)  and  the  Irish  neighbourhood  of  Oakland  constitute  an  unjustly  ignored  trove  of  postwar  

American  urban  realism.    

 

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“From  the  new  interstate  highways,  to  the  popularization  of  television,  

to  the  excision  of  old  neighbourhoods  through  urban  renewal  

programs,  the  impact  upon  everyday  life  was  profound.  Perceptions  of  

time  and  space,  bodily  rhythms,  and  experiences  of  speed,  distance  and  

density  were  destroyed  and  remade  no  less  palpably  than  the  

metropolitan  fabric.”  

-­‐  Edward  Dimendberg  (2004,  8)  

 

Lester  Goran  (1928-­‐2014),  published  eight  novels  and  three  short  story  collections.  

He  may  be  best  known  as  a  late-­‐period  translator  of  Isaac  Bashevis  Singer1,  as  well  as  

Singer’s  teaching  associate  at  the  University  of  Miami;  this  experience  was  

memorialised  in  Goran’s  The  Bright  Streets  of  Surfside  (1993).  

 

There  has  been  little  critical  attention  paid  to  Goran’s  fiction.  Apart  from  an  

unpublished  PhD  thesis  submitted  in  1972  by  Frederick  M.  Johnson  to  the  University  

of  Alabama,  and  an  extended  consideration  of  Goran’s  Irish  Club  stories  by  Patrick  

Meanor  in  the  Dictionary  of  Literary  Biography,  contemporaneous  newspaper  

reviews  of  Goran’s  books  constitute  the  body  of  critical  material.    

 

Although  resident  in  Miami  for  more  than  fifty  years,  Goran  wrote  again  and  again  

about  two  distinct  neighbourhoods  of  Pittsburgh,  Pennsylvania:  Sobaski’s  Stairway  

and  Oakland.  Goran’s  imaginative  recreations  of  the  slum  of  Sobaski’s  Stairway  (his  

lightly  fictionalised  Hill  District)  and  the  Irish  neighbourhoods  of  Oakland  

(represented  with  geographical  fidelity)  constitute  an  ignored  trove  of  postwar  

American  urban  writing.  This  paper  examines  Goran’s  life-­‐long  attempts  to  map  this  

evolving  urban  space  in  his  fiction,  and  will  situate  his  work  in  the  tradition  of  

American  urban  realism.  

 

The  Hill  District  of  Pittsburgh  is  a  historic  centre  of  African-­‐American  culture.  To  the  

poet  Claude  McKay,  the  Hill  District  from  1930-­‐1950  was  “the  crossroads  of  the  

1  Goran  translated  (in  collaboration  with  Singer)  a  number  of  the  stories  collected  in  The  Image  and  other  stories  (New  York:  Farrar  Straus  Giroux,  1985)  and  The  Death  of  Methuselah  (New  York,  Farrar  Straus  Giroux,  1988).  

 

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world”  (Clemetson  2002).  Many  legendary  jazz  musicians  grew  up  there  including  Art  

Blakey,  Errol  Garner,  Billy  Eckstine,  and  Lena  Horne  (Toker  1986,  232).  Lester  Goran  

was  a  schoolmate  of  the  saxophonist  Stanley  Turrentine  (Goran  2010).  The  Hill  was  

the  birthplace  of  the  Pulitzer  Prize-­‐winning  playwright  August  Wilson  who  used  the  

district  for  the  setting  of  his  century-­‐spanning  ten-­‐play  Pittsburgh  Cycle  (1982-­‐2005).  

Goran  once  worked  in  a  pawn  shop  across  the  street  from  Wilson’s  house  (Goran  

2008).    

 

Goran  spent  his  early  years  in  the  Hill  slums  of  the  5th  and  3rd  wards.  The  Gorans  were  

Jewish  in  this  predominately  African-­‐American  neighbourhood  (Goran  2008).  Jews  

had  arrived  on  The  Hill  as  part  of  a  population  of  Central  and  Eastern  European  

immigrants  in  the  1880s.  The  population  of  The  Hill  would  become  “entirely  black  

[by]  the  1940s”  (Toker  1986,  234).  As  a  child,  Goran  witnessed  this  transformation:  

 

After  a  while  there  weren’t  any  real  number  of  white  families  that  

were  a  coherent,  distinct  family  unit  anybody  could  identify  with.  

Most  of  the  families  left  there  were  pretty  dysfunctional.  As  a  matter  

of  fact  dysfunctionality  would  probably  be  about  four  steps  up  from  

where  they  were,  because  many  of  them  were  mad  enough  to  be  

incarcerated.  These  were  some  crazy  white  people  left  in  yards  and  

left  in  cellars…  It  would  be  a  very  dramatic  story  to  tell  you  that  we  

were  the  last  to  go.  We  weren’t.  There  were  three  or  four  more  

disorganised  people  left  behind.  For  all  I  know  they’re  still  there.    

(Goran  2008)  

 

Goran  eventually  moved  with  his  family  to  Terrace  Village,  east  of  the  Middle  Hill,  

very  close  to  the  University  of  Pittsburgh  in  Oakland  (Meanor  2001,  154).  Addison  

Terrace,  where  the  events  of  the  novel  Maria  Light  take  place,  was  a  housing  block  in  

this  vicinity,  above  the  “iron  city”  with  its  “rivet-­‐knotted  bridges  and  scarred  

telephone  poles,  the  flapping  posters…”  (Goran  1962,  27).  At  $14  million  dollars,  

Terrace  Village  was  the  second  largest  government  housing  project  of  its  time.  

President  Roosevelt  opened  part  of  the  project  in  1940.  Franklin  Toker  (1986,  241)  

describes  Terrace  Village  as  “an  enclave  that  was  detached  from  the  street  grids  of  

Oakland  and  The  Hill,  so  that  the  development  became  an  orphan  to  both  of  the  older  

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centres.”  Nevertheless,  as  of  1986  Toker  judged  the  project  a  success,  in  contrast  to  St  

Louis’s  notoriously  failed  Pruitt-­‐Igoe  housing  project.  

 

To  Goran,  his  professional  career  

 

isn’t  the  story  about  a  guy  who  worked  his  way  up  from  a  

government  housing  project.  I  often  have  to  explain  this  to  my  

friends.  ‘Say  what  a  story  this  is!  A  guy  coming  from  a  government  

housing  project  and  teaching  college  and  writing  all  these  books...’  

Wait.  The  government  housing  project  was  the  happy  ending  to  

where  I  came  from.    

(Goran  2008)  

 

At  the  beginning  of  his  literary  career  Goran  reimagined  The  Hill  as  Greendale,  an  

area  almost  exclusively  referred  to  as  ‘Sobaski’s  Stairway’,  named  for  the  despised  

prohibition-­‐era  character  Metro  Sobaski  who  sells  moonshine  on  one  of  the  district’s  

many  wooden  stairways.  Sobaski’s  Stairway  is  the  setting  of  The  Paratrooper  of  

Mechanic  Avenue  (1960),  and  appears  in  the  background  of  two  early  Oakland  novels  

by  Goran:  Maria  Light  (1962)  and  The  Stranger  in  the  Snow  (1966).  In  the  earliest  

novel,  Goran  sets  out  the  lay  of  the  land  circa  1931:  

 

The  twisting  slum  of  small  wooden  frame  houses,  cobblestoned  

alleys,  speak-­‐easies,  brothels,  and  brown  tenements,  sneaking  

around  and  converging  on  Mechanic  Avenue,  was  the  particular  place  

meant  by  most  outsiders  when  they  spoke  of  Sobaski’s  Stairway.  The  

famous  landmark,  a  rendezvous  for  a  generation  of  bootleggers,  was  

at  Fifteenth  Street  where  the  slum  ended  and  the  worked-­‐out  

mounds  began.  

(Goran  1960,  4)  

 

In  The  Paratrooper,  the  neighbourhood  is  depicted  with  vividly  specific  detail:  we  

learn  the  names  of  streets  (Pig  Alley,  Our  Way,  Riverspoon  St),  bars  (Freddie’s,  

DeAngelo’s),  and  other  establishments  (Top  Dollar  Sammy’s,  Bosco  the  Processor,  

Professor  Chandu’s  Health  Store,  Pop’s  Cut-­‐rate,  Novakovitch’s  Pool  Hall).  These  

 

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locations  are  fictional,  and  there’s  no  point  trying  to  make  exact  correspondences  

between  the  real  Hill  and  its  fictional  double.  Goran  told  me  his  reason  for  not  using  

real  locations  in  this  book—as  he  does  so  extensively  in  his  subsequent  work—was  

“because  I  didn’t  want  the  book  attached  to  me.  The  characters  in  that  book  were  not  

my  mother  and  father...  They  were  an  amalgam  of  a  certain  kind  of  underclass  life  that  

I  was  aware  of  because  I  grew  up  around  it”  (Goran  2008).  Nevertheless  the  historical  

circumstances  of  the  fictional  Stairway  are  closely  modelled  on  those  of  The  Hill.    

 

After  a  century  of  demands  for  housing  reform,  nation-­‐wide  urban  conditions  

worsened  significantly  with  the  onset  of  the  Great  Depression.  New  construction  and  

repairs  stopped,  slums  expanded,  and  foreclosures  increased  to  the  rate  of  a  thousand  

homes  a  day  in  1933.  Emergency  legislation  was  passed  to  deal  with  these  problems.  

Ultimately  the  housing  policies  established  in  the  New  Deal  era  “embodied,  on  a  

limited  scale  for  the  most  part,  virtually  all  the  approaches  to  housing  that  had  been  

suggested  by  urban  planners  and  reformers  during  the  preceding  twenty  years:  the  

conservative  policies  of  mortgage  insurance  and  loans  to  limited-­‐dividend  housing  

companies,  as  well  as  relatively  more  radical  approaches  of  slum  clearance  and  

garden  cities”  (Glaab  &  Brown  1967,  299-­‐302).  

 

Like  many  American  inner-­‐cities,  Pittsburgh  was  subject  to  a  grand  project  of  slum  

clearance  or  ‘urban  renewal’.  Pittsburgh’s  first  phase  of  this  project  came  to  be  known  

as  Renaissance  I  (1946-­‐73).  The  city  has  been  characterized  as  “the  greatest  exemplar  

of  urban  renaissance  during  the  first  decade  following  World  War  II”  (Teaford  1990,  

108).  The  Gateway  Center  (1952-­‐1953)  was  an  office  complex  on  the  site  of  the  

downtown  Point  at  the  junction  of  the  Allegheny,  Monongahela,  and  Ohio  Rivers.  

Constructed  on  ground  previously  occupied  by  “railroad  yards  and  shabby  

warehouses”,  the  Gateway  Center  was  a  celebrated  addition  to  the  Pittsburgh  skyline,  

so  much  so  that  a  1959  Holiday  magazine  article  was  titled  ‘Pittsburgh:  The  City  That  

Quick-­‐Changed  from  Unbelievable  Ugliness  to  Shining  Beauty  in  Less  Than  Half  a  

Generation’.  This  project  was  a  joint  municipal,  state  and  private  endeavour  rather  

than  part  of  the  federal  urban  renewal  program  (Teaford  1990,  109).    

 

Federal-­‐funded  projects  were  less  successful.  According  to  Franklin  Toker:    

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The  reconstruction  of  the  Lower  Hill  began  in  1955  with  $17  million  

in  federal  grants.  In  an  area  of  100  acres,  1,300  buildings  housing  413  

businesses  and  8,000  residents  (a  majority  of  them  black)  were  

displaced...  Even  were  one  to  overlook  the  devastating  social  impact  

of  the  Lower  Hill  redevelopment,  its  success  could  only  be  judged  as  

minor…  the  major  cause  of  its  failure  was  the  animosity  between  the  

developers  and  the  black  community.  When  that  animosity  boiled  

over  as  part  of  the  nationwide  racial  riots  of  1968,  Pittsburgh’s  

dream  of  a  cultural  acropolis  on  the  Lower  Hill  ended.  

(Toker  1986,  234)  

 

The  Civic  Arena,  an  opera  venue  built  in  1962,  and  its  attendant  parking  lots,  

effectively  replaced  the  entire  Lower  Hill  (Toker  1986,  235).  Edward  K  Muller  calls  

“the  Lower  Hill  project…a  classic  example  of  an  urban  renewal  failure”  (Muller  2006,  

11).  

 

This  was  not  a  unique  case  in  postwar  development.  In  the  early  1970s  the  urban  

historian  Sam  Bass  Warner  criticised  the  results  of  ‘urban  renewal’  policies  across  the  

United  States.  He  wrote  that  “municipal  officials  and  commercial  interests  turned  the  

ten-­‐billion-­‐dollar  program  into  an  irresponsible  social  monster”.  Warner  partially  

blames  the  “metropolitan  dysfunction  of  the  property  tax”  for  turning  policy  against  

working  class  communities;  municipal  tax  revenue  was  dependent  on  high  property  

values,  which  meant  middle-­‐class  residents.  With  over  a  million  working  class  

housing  units  destroyed  across  the  country  as  of  1967,  only  5%  of  housing  approvals  

in  the  projects  had  been  for  low-­‐income  public  housing.  Under  the  direction  of  “inner-­‐

city  business  interests  and  reform-­‐minded  moderates  who  were  unaware  of  the  

future  consequences  of  ‘urban  renewal’,  or  who  wanted  to  protect  their  own  

neighbourhoods  against  the  poor  and  the  black,”  ‘urban  renewal’  left  landscapes  of  

“refurbished  downtowns,  sports  stadia,  new  government  and  corporate  office  towers,  

and  slabs  of  high-­‐rise  luxury  apartments.”  To  Warner,  these  landscapes  “stand  in  

shameless  witness  to  the  callousness  of  American  class  and  race  relations”  (Warner  

1972,  243-­‐244).  

 

 

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Although  Goran  now  describes  the  inhabitants  of  Pittsburgh’s  Hill  as  “a  people  

without  any  kind  of  distinctive  connection  to  their  neighbourhood...You  just  lived  

there  and  you  got  out  of  there  and  moved  somewhere  else,”  he  is  still  ambivalent  

about  the  destruction  of  the  neighbourhood:  “It  was  a  rotten,  miserable  slum  and  it  

should  have  been  torn  down  but  at  the  same  time  at  what  loss  to  us?  At  what  loss  to  

our  lives  did  you  take  away  our  decrepit...  boards  and  take  away  our  whole  culture?”  

He  compares  the  process  of  ‘urban  renewal’  to  the  destructions  of  the  shtetls  of  

Europe.  “[The  authorities]  simply  despatch[ed]  us  with  far  more  gentility,  far  more  

kindness,  but  by  the  same  token  at  the  end  of  it  [left]  the  kind  of  emptiness  of  a  plain  

where  nothing  will  grow”  (Goran  2008).  

 

   

The  Paratrooper  of  Mechanic  Avenue  is  set  in  the  context  of  such  a  project  of  ill-­‐fated  

‘urban  renewal’.  The  novel  is  the  story  of  Ike-­‐o,  a  slum  child  born  to  a  Polish  

immigrant  woman  and  Charlie  Hartwell,  a  man  from  a  dubiously  “distinguished  

American  family”  (Goran  1960,  66).  Ike-­‐o  is  born  in  a  communal  toilet  in  a  tenement  

in  the  winter  of  1931  during  the  worst  deprivations  of  the  Great  Depression.  Several  

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early  chapters  focus  on  Charlie’s  alcoholism  and  friendship  with  his  drinking  partner  

Thadeus  “Fats”  Smolcher,  a  Polish  immigrant.  Smolcher  is  the  father  of  daughters  

with  “reputations  for  promiscuity”  (59).  We’re  also  introduced  to  O.  C.  “Catfish”  

Gedunsky,  a  charismatic  Democratic  Party  deal-­‐maker,  who  is  hated  by  the  racist,  

antisemitic  Charlie  for  his  supposed  progressive  politics.  Miss  Fireman,  a  Sobaski’s  

Stairway  charity  worker,  helps  negotiate  a  series  of  truces  between  Charlie  and  his  

wife.  

 

As  a  teenager,  Ike-­‐o  begins  courting  Smolcher’s  daughter  Dolly.  Goran  lets  us  see  the  

demographically  changing  neighbourhood  from  their  perspective:  “Negroes  had  

infiltrated  Sobaski’s  Stairway,  house  by  house,  street  by  street;  the  Polish,  Syrians,  

Jews  and  Italians  were  fleeing  as  if  the  new  immigrants  constituted  the  army  of  a  

hostile  country”  (65-­‐66).  Goran  does  not  attempt  to  provide  a  black  perspective  on  

this  era  of  The  Hill’s  history.  (Fortunately,  August  Wilson  devoted  much  of  his  

working  life  to  that  very  project.)  

 

Ike-­‐o  soon  takes  to  visiting  a  black  whorehouse—even  going  on  the  payroll  to  steer  

high  school  traffic  its  way—all  the  while  idealising  Dolly’s  virginity.  Later  he  is  

arrested  for  helping  Gedunsky  run  a  profitable  gangbang  in  a  secluded  courtyard.  

After  his  high  school  graduation,  Ike-­‐o  joins  the  army,  still  betrothed  to  Dolly  despite  

his  father’s  objections.  As  he  departs  Sobaski’s  Stairway  by  train,  Ike-­‐o  muses  on  the  

neighbourhood:  

 

There  had  been  a  rumor  in  the  newspapers  that  Sobaski’s  Stairway,  

all  one  hundred  and  ninety-­‐five  acres,  was  going  to  be  torn  down  by  a  

Pennsylvania  state  redevelopment  commission.  Ike-­‐o  watched  the  

passing  street  lights,  the  gray  buildings  muffled  in  color  by  the  late  

light  until  they  looked  like  stored-­‐away  furniture  with  sheets  on  

them.  There  had  been  rumours  that  Sobaski’s  Stairway  was  going  to  

be  torn  down  since  he  was  a  boy.  The  tenements  had  been  

condemned  for  years,  but  there  was  not  enough  room  yet  in  the  

federal  housing  developments  for  the  people  of  Greendale;  they  lived  

on  in  the  leaky,  drafty  old  buildings.  He  saw  a  bum  vomiting  before  

Freddie’s.  He  saw  the  bum  wipe  his  mouth  with  his  sleeve  and  

 

9

stagger  in  the  growing  darkness  back  down  Mechanic  Avenue.  Ike-­‐o  

thought  that  the  rumor  was  not  true.    

(99)  

 

While  Ike-­‐o  is  away  from  the  Stairway,  Dolly  sleeps  with  a  football  player  and  falls  

pregnant.  She  is  also  beaten  and  nearly  raped  by  a  security  guard.  Meanwhile,  after  

some  initial  success  in  army  life,  and  much  promiscuity  characterised  by  physical  

abuse  of  his  girlfriends,  Ike-­‐o  comes  to  fear  the  prospect  of  fighting  in  Korea.  He  

sabotages  his  own  health  to  avoid  deployment.  Ultimately  he  is  confined  to  a  mental  

ward.  All  this  time  “Ike-­‐o  held  on  to  the  thought  of  Dolly  as  other  men  in  the  [mental]  

ward  huddled  over  crucifixes,  believing,  believing”  (117).  Ike-­‐o  is  unsure  himself  

whether  he  is  faking  mental  illness  or  truly  sick.  His  efforts  to  return  to  duty  are  

rebuffed,  and  Ike-­‐o  descends  into  a  long  period  of  depression.  When  the  prospect  of  

Korean  service  is  really  at  hand,  Ike-­‐o  panics  and  pushes  a  colonel  down  a  flight  of  

stairs.  After  two  months  in  the  stockade,  he  is  dishonourably  discharged.  He  comes  

back  to  Sobaski’s  Stairway  in  army  surplus  paratrooper  boots,  telling  fraudulent  

stories  of  his  military  career  which  nobody,  certainly  not  his  mother,  seem  to  believe.  

These  false  stories  have  no  consequences  at  all.  By  now  ‘urban  renewal’  is  well  under  

way,  and  Goran  maps  the  rapid  and  irreversible  change  to  this  urban  landscape  

through  the  unique  perspective  of  his  protagonist.    

 

Robert  Alter’s  term  for  the  variety  of  techniques  authors  have  employed  to  represent  

the  subjective  experience  of  the  modern  urban  landscape  is  experiential  realism  (Alter  

2005).  Goran’s  experiential  realism  is  in  most  ways  stylistically  consonant  with  James  

T.  Farrell  and  the  ‘slum  novel’  tradition.  But  one  should  not  overlook  Goran’s  perhaps  

unlikely  debt  to  Henry  James,  the  great  chronicler  of  the  American  upper  class.  Goran  

told  me,  “I  don’t  think  Henry  James  and  my  subjects  pick  up  that  well  but  it’s  what  I  

want  to  do.  It’s  what  I  tried  to  do  from  the  beginning.”  Goran  felt  an  affinity  to  the  

loneliness  at  the  crux  of  James’  work,  which  he  believed  middle-­‐class  critics  could  not  

comprehend.  Goran’s  work  represents  a  significant  departure  from  the  traditional  

slum  novel  in  other  ways.  He  told  me  about  his  disenchantment  with  the  “endless  

insistence”  of  writers  like  Farrell  on  the  meaningfulness  of  ideological  left-­‐wing  

politics  in  the  slums,  which  Goran’s  people  distrusted  with  their  customary  

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scepticism  (Goran  2008).  And  what  is  most  unique  about  The  Paratrooper  as  an  urban  

slum  novel  is  Goran’s  choice  of  protagonist.  This  has  consequences  for  both  the  

uniqueness  and  the  effectiveness  of  this  novel.  

 

It  is  instructive  to  contrast  Goran’s  Ike-­‐o  Hartwell  with  the  protagonist  of  Saul  

Bellow’s  immense  picaresque  novel  The  Adventures  of  Augie  March  (1953).  For  Augie  

March,  the  chaos  of  the  modern  city—even  the  slum—is  all  possibility.  Growing  up  

poor  in  Depression-­‐era  Chicago,  Augie  boisterously  navigates  the  city’s  emerging  

technologies  of  public  and  private  transport,  its  modern  buildings,  its  teeming  streets.  

He  “touch[es]  all  sides”  (Bellow  1995,  132)  of  society  from  the  criminal  to  the  ruling  

class.  These  experiences,  specifically  rooted  in  the  circumstances  of  Chicago’s  urban  

development,  provoke  all  manner  of  arcane  philosophical  speculation.  With  the  city  

as  mentor,  Augie  March  may  be  the  ultimate  twentieth  century  American  

bildungsroman,  and  the  defining  urban  novel  of  its  era.    

 

Goran  writes  not  just  of  another  industrial  city  but  of  an  entirely  different  sensibility.  

Ike-­‐o  Hartwell  is  a  grim  and  charmless  character.  He  is  not  particularly  self-­‐aware,  

able  to  express  himself  to  others  (or  to  himself),  nor  in  possession  of  any  particular  

agency  beyond  his  idealised  desire  for  Dolly.  We  are  told  that  as  a  young  man  “Ike-­‐o’s  

thoughts  went  round  in  circles;  they  sometimes  left  him  exhausted.  He  brooded  a  

great  deal,  not  knowing  even  where  to  begin  thinking  about  some  things,  like  his  

family  or  sex  or  Sobaski’s  Stairway…  He  watched  most  things  jealously,  through  gray  

eyes  speckled  with  red  dots  and  envy  for  people  better  poised  than  he  was,  better  

dressed,  or  better  looking”  (Goran  1960,  67).  

 

Contemporary  criticisms  of  the  book  focused  on  the  protagonist.  Charles  Poore  of  the  

daily  New  York  Times  noted  that  Ike-­‐o  has  a  “general  aura  of  unlovableness  to  which  

the  plot  of  the  novel  sentences  him”  and  “takes  to  a  life  of  odd-­‐lot  crime  with  a  

somewhat  numbing  aptness”  (Poore  1960).  William  Wise  wrote  in  the  New  York  

Times  Book  Review  that  “the  author’s  principal  failure…  is  with  Ike-­‐o  Hartwell,  the  

pivotal  figure  of  his  novel…  Ike-­‐o’s  thoughts  or  feelings  are  expressed  far  too  often  in  

a  murky  prose  which  confuses  rather  than  clarifies;  too  often  he  remains  a  shadowy  

figure,  his  passions,  yearnings,  and  terrors  either  unexpressed  or  uncommunicated”  

 

11

(Wise  1960).  

 

But  perhaps  some  of  this  perceived  failing  is  inevitable,  indeed  quite  inextricable  

from  Goran’s  project.  Ike-­‐o  is  an  archetypal  Pittsburgh  street  character.  Goran’s  

intentions  with  Ike-­‐o  are  quoted  on  the  first  edition  dust  jacket:  Ike-­‐o  “is  a  myth,  a  

representative  figure  for  all  the  ugly,  hostile  people  who  are  searching  for  something  

that  will  not  bite  them”  (Goran  1960).  Today  Goran  reflects  that  Ike-­‐o  had  “no  

capacity  for  talking  at  all,  he  had  no  way  of  explaining  his  sense  of  loss”  (Goran  2008).    

 

Comparing  his  slum  characters  to  Bellow’s,  Goran  told  me  

 

[Bellow  is]  more  a  creator  of  wise  guys  than  real  street  guys.  I  mean,  

I’m  sure  they  exist  on  some  level  in  Chicago  but  the  guys  that  I  knew  

[in  Pittsburgh]  weren’t  like  that.  They  weren’t  like  guys  in  Philip  

Roth.  These  were  guys  who  were  so  inward.  There  wasn’t  any  of  

them  who  were  Delphic  expressionistic  people  who  would  talk  

beautifully  in  a  kind  of  Bellow  language  about  things.  This  is  not  to  

say  I’m  condemning  Bellow  for  it.  He’s  an  artist,  he’s  created  a  whole  

world  in  himself.  But  it  doesn’t  really  from  my  point  of  view,  any  

more  than  Roth,  have  anything  to  do  with  the  way  life  is  lived  or  the  

way  life  is  understood  by  the  people...  they’re  writing  about.  

(Goran  2008)  

 

The  Paratrooper  of  Mechanic  Avenue  can  be  seen  as  an  attempt  to  reconcile  realistic  

characters  of  a  slum  milieu  with  the  conventions  of  the  novel.    

 

Goran  utilises  a  third  person  voice  that  is  sometimes  omniscient  but  mostly  filtered  

through  the  perceptions  of  Ike-­‐o.  He  has  rarely  used  the  first  person  in  his  work.  

Goran  says  of  the  third  person,  “I  find  a  greater  latitude  for  a  certain  kind  of  

subjective  imposition  of  your  voice”  (Goran  2008).  Certainly  the  language  of  The  

Paratrooper  is  furnished  with  a  richness  that  is  beyond  Ike-­‐o’s  faculties,  although  it  

generally  cleaves  to  the  limitations  and  peculiarities  of  his  consciousness.    

 

In  any  case,  if  Ike-­‐o  as  a  character  is  sometimes  obscure,  despite—or  due  to—our  

12

access  to  his  thoughts,  his  subjectivity  nevertheless  maps  the  flux  of  a  slum  

undergoing  ‘urban  renewal’.  Although  at  first  something  of  a  striver—Ike-­‐o  “liked  

history;  he  studied  it  more  than  the  other  school  subjects.  It  gave  him  a  feeling  that  

life  was  bigger  and  broader  and  deeper  than  Sobaski’s  Stairway”  (72)—Ike-­‐o  never  

really  develops  a  sophisticated  vision  of  the  world  outside  himself,  a  political,  social,  

economic  context  for  postwar  urban  change.  Gedunsky,  despite  his  political  position,  

is  no  mentor  in  this  field.  As  such,  Ike-­‐o  can  only  observe  his  decaying,  disappearing  

neighbourhood  through  the  specifics  in  his  immediate  vicinity.  Ike-­‐o’s  focus  is  usually  

on  everything  at  his  paratrooper  boots.  

 

Happy  to  be  back  home,  he  discovers  that  the  houses  of  Smolcher  and  Gedunsky  have  

been  razed.  

 

Ike-­‐o  inhaled  early  dusk  on  Mechanic  Avenue  with  a  sense  of  

anticipation.  He  stood  squarely  in  his  paratrooper  boots  at  the  corner  

of  Second  Avenue  and  Mechanic  Avenue  and  breathed  in  happiness  

as  well  as  brick  dust  with  every  breath.  First  Avenue  still  remained,  

there  were  two  churches  there  whose  congregations  had  failed  

appeals:  but  Second,  Third,  Fourth,  Fifth,  and  Sixth  Streets,  along  with  

the  alley  tributaries  of  Our  Way,  Castle  Road,  Henderson  Way,  and  

McCully  Place,  were  not.  

 

Where  they  had  been  was  a  huge  torn-­‐up  field  of  piled  rubble,  bricks,  

and  lumber,  and  a  rickety  low  wooden  fence  ran  around  the  entire  

five-­‐block  area.    

(137)  

 

Ike-­‐o  asks  around  for  Dolly’s  whereabouts  and  then:  

 

An  uneasiness  came  into  Ike-­‐o’s  good  feelings:  so  it  was  happening,  

Sobaski’s  Stairway—the  blighted  business  area  on  Mechanic  Avenue  

fit  only  for  store-­‐front  religions  and  gypsies,  saloons,  pawnshops,  

poolrooms,  and  postage  stamp  delicatessens,  and  the  perennially  

condemned  tenements—was  being  decimated.  But  Sobaski’s  

 

13

Stairway  was  not  a  layed-­‐out  corpse  yet.  Over  there,  at  Seventh  Street  

and  Mechanic  Avenue,  there  started  the  same  forest  of  fire  escapes  

and  amusement  park  posters,  and  clean  wash  hung  from  the  

windows  of  tenements.  

 

Ike-­‐o  strolled  happily  again  up  Mechanic  Avenue  through  uneven  

rows  of  dark  milk-­‐box  loafers  and  orange-­‐crate  humbugs.  He  smelled  

yesterday’s  garbage  on  the  afternoon  fog  and  listened  to  the  sound  

his  boots  made  thumping  on  the  old  cracked  sidewalk.  

(138)  

 

That  strangely  abrupt  adverb  “happily”!  Ike-­‐o  has  found  his  fiancé’s  house  

demolished,  her  whereabouts  unknown,  and  throughout  this  experience  has  only  

fleeting  responses  to  the  destruction  of  the  neighbourhood.  Yet  that  very  evening,  

after  getting  drunk  and  screaming  “I  never  did  anything  right  in  my  life!”  into  the  

“quiet  darkness”  (140),  we  read  about  Ike-­‐o’s  emotional  dependence  on  the  familiar  

sounds  of  the  Stairway:  “...footsteps  on  concrete  and  far  away  a  streetcar  and  

somewhere  a  water  faucet  dripping”  (152).  This  noise  helps  him  sleep.    

 

Dolly’s  betrayal  of  Ike-­‐o—she  now  has  an  illegitimate  son—destroys  their  hopes  for  a  

life  together.  Ike-­‐o  finds  employment  with  a  salvage  company  and  a  construction  

gang,  so  that  “each  day,  under  his  boots  and  heavy  matted  gloves,  there  was  less  to  

Sobaski’s  Stairway.”  Missionaries  “had  been  forced  by  the  state  redevelopment  

commission  to  drift  away  like  mortar  dust  in  a  strong  wind  to  seek  other  sinners…  

their  windows  now  hung  shattered  and  disembodied  and  lonesome  for  the  armies  of  

hopheads,  darbs,  and  alcoholics  who  no  longer  washed  them  at  fifty  cents  a  day  on  

the  ugly  quicksand  road  to  rehabilitation.”  In  a  poignant  scene,  Mrs  Fireman,  aged  and  

ill,  her  charity  centre  demolished,  settles  for  an  abandoned  temporary  construction  

shack  on  the  old  site.  She  sits  there,  “observing  the  world  from  her  rightful  place.”  Ike-­‐

o  “[hacks]  away  at  the  spent,  disinherited  brown  earth…  as  if  the  ground  had  harmed  

him  or  was  the  cause  of  his  misery”  (178-­‐181).  Ironically,  Ike-­‐o’s  job  helps  finance  the  

purchase  of  a  statue  to  place  over  his  father’s  grave,  a  memorial  to  an  already  

forgotten  life  lived  in  the  razed  streets.  

 

14

Ike-­‐o  and  Dolly  toy  with  reunion,  but  Ike-­‐o  is  unable  to  reconcile  with  her  sexual  

betrayal.  Directly  after  their  first  mature  sexual  encounter,  he  beats  her  in  public.  His  

attempts  at  revenge,  according  to  the  New  York  Times,  “[deteriorate]  into  a  dreary  

sort  of  sadism  marinated  in  young  Hartwell’s  infinite  capacity  for  self-­‐pity”  (Poore  

1960).  The  novel  concludes  anticlimactically,  or  perhaps  simply  within  the  

possibilities  of  the  milieu.  Realising  he  no  longer  loves  her,  Ike-­‐o  pays  his  “big  debt”  

(Goran  1960,  242)  by  insulting  Dolly  in  an  extravagant,  ersatz-­‐macho  manner.  He  

hopes  this  will  convince  her  he  is  beyond  redemption.  In  his  mind,  this  will  allow  

Dolly  to  move  on  and  marry  her  old,  unattractive  fiancé.    

 

The  Paratrooper  of  Mechanic  Avenue  is  indeed,  as  Charles  Poore  labelled  it,  “resolutely  

grim”.  In  Goran’s  later  stories  of  Oakland,  his  characters  live  in  a  startling  

synchronicity  with  their  streets  and  landmarks,  the  city  the  skeleton  of  their  

community,  and  suffer  mightily  from  the  neighbourhood’s  slow  obliteration.  The  

Stairway  dwellers  in  Paratrooper  ultimate  lack  the  ability  to  comprehend  the  

destruction  of  their  district.  Their  overwhelming  concerns  are  elemental—financial  

survival,  alcoholism,  everyday  violence.  In  the  Oakland  stories,  as  we  shall  see,  the  

wrecking  ball  becomes  a  recognised  enemy.  Those  who  left  Sobaski’s  Stairway  before  

‘urban  renewal’  and  prevailed  are  mentioned  in  Goran’s  later  novel  The  Stranger  in  

the  Snow:  “By  1945  most  of  [Harry]  Myers’  people  who  had  not  died  had  retreated  to  

Oakland,  the  survivors  of  a  tattered  army  routed  by  Urban  Redevelopment  but  now  

fat  with  electric  refrigerators  not  wooden  iceboxes,  full-­‐length  mirrors  on  their  

bedroom  doors  and  nylon  carpeting  not  linoleum  in  their  living  rooms”  (Goran,  3).  

But  the  “crazy  white  people  left  in  yards  and  left  in  cellars”  doomed  to  the  last  days  of  

the  Stairway  never  really  fathom  what  is  happening.    

 

Paratrooper  is  a  testament  to  Goran’s  commitment  to  memorialising  the  lives  of  the  

“ugly  hostile  people”  in  the  slums.  If  the  novel  is  sometimes  frustrating  because  of  the  

“murky  prose”  representing  Ike-­‐o’s  interior  world—and  because  of  an  unremitting  

bleakness  that  allows  for  only  a  minor  transformation  of  its  protagonist—it  is  

nevertheless  a  vivid  mapping  of  the  Pittsburgh  slum  in  decay  and  ‘urban  renewal’.    

 

*  

 

15

 

Goran  had  published  six  novels  through  1971.  The  outstanding  but  now  almost  

unknown  comic  novels  The  Candy  Butcher’s  Farewell  (1964)  and  The  Keeper  of  Secrets  

(1971)  are  set  for  the  most  part  outside  Pittsburgh.  The  murder  story  The  Demon  in  

the  Sun  Parlor  (1968)  is  set  in  Miami.  Although  he  continued  to  write,  Goran’s  fiction  

did  not  again  appear  in  print—with  the  exception  of  two  commercial  paperback  ‘saga’  

novels—until  1985’s  Mrs  Beautiful,  which  reimagines  the  brutal  strikes  at  McKees  

Rocks  in  1909.  In  the  late  1990s  Goran  re-­‐emerged  with  three  cycles  of  Oakland  short  

stories:  Tales  From  The  Irish  Club  (1996),  She  Loved  Me  Once  and  other  stories  (1997)  

and  Outlaws  of  the  Purple  Cow  and  other  stories  (1999),  and  a  closely-­‐related  novel,  

Bing  Crosby’s  Last  Song  (1998).  Set  variously  from  the  Depression  to  the  1970s,  these  

works  are  anchored  by  the  presence  of  the  drinking  club  of  the  Ancient  Order  of  

Hibernians,  Local  No.  9,  on  Oakland  Avenue  (a  fictionalised  version  of  this  Irish  Club  

appeared  in  Maria  Light  as  the  Irish-­‐American  Friendship  Society).  At  the  Irish  Club  

the  act  of  storytelling  sustains  the  community.  Patrick  Meanor  has  compared  Goran’s  

story  cycles  to  those  of  John  Steinbeck  and  Sherwood  Anderson,  where  “the  

redemptive  power  of  narrative  that  temporarily  creates  a  timeless,  Edenic  realm  of  

hope  and  promise  saves  both  the  tellers  and  the  listeners  in  all  these  collections  from  

the  fallen  world  of  time”  (Meanor  2001,  154).    

 

Goran  did  not  return  to  the  subject  of  Sobaski’s  Stairway/The  Hill.  Oakland  is  only  a  

few  miles  east  of  the  Hill  but  according  to  Goran  possessed  a  completely  different  

cultural  sensibility:    

 

[Oakland]  was  a  neighbourhood  that  was  as  solid  as  a  cathedral.  

These  were  Irish  Catholics  who  believed  in  a  purpose  of  life  that  was  

going  to  be  fulfilled  by  adherence  to  certain  ways  of  looking  and  

thinking  about  things.  One  of  the  great  things  about  writing  about  

[the  Irish]  was  the  fact  that  they  were  so  easily  jarred  out  of  their  

illusions  by  the  realities  of  what  other  people  were  like  or  what  they  

were  like  themselves.  A  person  in  [The  Hill]  would  never  be  startled  

by  what  they  were  capable  of…  There  would  be  no  guilt,  nothing,  

they  just  would  forget  about  it.  But  in  Oakland  this  was  a  people  for  

whom  memory  was  a  very,  very  important  part  of  coping  with  life.    

16

(Goran  2008)  

 

Oakland,  an  area  of  seven  hundred  acres,  a  recipient  of  the  philanthropy  of  Schenley,  

Carnegie,  Mellon  and  others,  has  been  called  Pittsburgh’s  “nerve  centre  of  education  

and  culture”  (Toker  1986,  79).  Toker  speculates  that  Oakland  was  originally  intended  

to  replicate  the  1893  Chicago  World  Columbian  Exposition  which  “took  American  by  

storm  in  its  lavishness,  its  bold  scale  of  planning,  and  the  grandeur  of  its  look-­‐alike  

Imperial  Roman  Buildings…  the  buildings  and  the  streets  of  Oakland  concretized  the  

vision  of  a  more  glorious  America  that  had  been  fleetingly  raised  in  Chicago”  (Toker  

1986,  81).  Oakland  continues  to  this  day  to  be  the  cultural  centre  of  Pittsburgh.  But  

the  Oakland  of  Goran’s  stories  is  that  of  the  working  class  Irish  community,  which  is  

disconnected  from  the  academic  realms  of  the  University  of  Pittsburgh  and  the  

Carnegie  Institute.  Goran’s  stories  are  set  in  the  Irish  Club,  and  in  saloons,  churches,  

old  houses,  and  government  housing  projects  such  as  Terrace  Village.  It  is  a  world  of  

melancholy  remembrance,  ghosts,  and  the  mythical  transformation  of  the  mundane.    

 

In  his  introduction  to  Tales  from  the  Irish  Club,  Goran  says:  “No  one  except  a  fiction  

writer  would  want  to  perpetuate  a  cast  of  all  the  unremembered  delegates  from  an  

abandoned  time”  (Goran  1996,  xii).  The  Oaklanders  of  1965—the  year  the  Irish  Club  

closed—are  characterised  by  Goran  as  seeing  their  “manners  and  ways  of  thinking  

about  things  [as]  eternal…  caught  in  a  time  of  long,  slow  twilight,  lit  in  the  rose  and  

gold  of  certainty  and  things  in  place.”  But  in  actuality  this  world  is  at  an  end.  None  of  

the  people  who  drank  at  the  Irish  Club  “knew  we  were  living  at  the  end  of  a  period  of  

time  as  gone  now  as  the  Weimar  Republic  or  the  Soviet  Union”  (Goran  1996,  xi).  

Elsewhere  Goran  writes  that  “we  could  not  dream  of  our  approaching  separation  

from  each  other  or  our  houses  sitting  with  boarded-­‐up  windows  and  tin  cans,  broken  

bottles,  and  abandoned  automobile  tires  in  the  front  yards,  our  streets  dissected  into  

new  configurations,  as  if  we  had  lost  a  war”  (Goran  1997,  xii).  

 

Bing  Crosby’s  Last  Song  expands  on  the  short  story  ‘Evenings  With  The  Right  Racklin’  

from  the  She  Loved  Me  Once  collection.  The  novel  is  set  in  the  pivotal  American  year  of  

1968  in  the  midst  of  race  riots  after  the  assassination  of  Martin  Luther  King.  Its  

characters  have  a  remarkable  physical  synchronicity  with  Oakland  and  suffer  as  the  

 

17

places  to  which  they  orientate  themselves  slowly  disappear.  Indeed,  by  now  even  the  

Irish  Club  has  closed  its  doors.  Here  it  is  not  ‘urban  renewal’  that  is  wiping  out  the  old  

neighbourhood,  but  the  expansion  of  the  University  of  Pittsburgh.  Goran’s  characters  

live  in  the  vicinity  of  the  university  but  most  have  nothing  to  do  with  the  institution;  

in  fact,  there  is  a  marked  antagonism.    

 

   

The  protagonist  of  Bing  Crosby’s  Last  Song,  Daly  Racklin,  is  a  lifelong  Oakland  resident  

and  attorney-­‐at-­‐law  (how  he  came  by  his  qualifications  is  not  explained).  He  

confesses  he  has  never  been  inside  the  university.  Even  though  Goran  himself  

attended  the  university  on  the  G.I.  Bill  and  graduated  with  an  M.A.  in  1960,  in  his  

fiction  he  is  almost  exclusively  interested  in  characters  alien  to  the  academy:  

 I  see  things  through  their  eyes  mostly  because  I  was  like  them.  I  

wasn’t  like  any  kind  of  intellectual  or  a  guy  who  even  liked  the  

company  of  intellectuals.  I  wound  up  teaching  college  almost  fifty  

years  and  I  still  don’t  like  it.  I  still  don’t  like  the  kind  of  pretences  

towards  superiority.  

(Goran  2008)  

18

 

The  novel  begins  as  Daly  “Right”  Racklin  is  diagnosed  with  a  terminal  heart  condition.  

He  is  a  dependable  community  leader,  even  to  the  point  of  masochism.  He  inherited  

the  role  from  his  father,  the  first  “Right”  Racklin—the  name  too  was  “transferred  like  

a  royal  title”  (Goran  1998,  14)—whose  goodness  has  become  a  local  myth.  Daly  has  

had  conversations  for  years  with  a  bartender  at  the  Metropole  about  the  senior  

Racklin.  One  night  Daly  realises  that  the  bartender  has  had  another  man  in  mind  all  

the  time.  Rather  than  be  annoyed,  Daly  feels  a  strange  solace:  “why,  the  two  of  us  are  

celebrating  goodness  that  doesn’t  need  a  man  attached,  goodness  so  pure  in  the  air  

that  it  inhabits  one  man  or  another,  no  matter…  Outside  the  night  wore  shoes  of  iron,  

but  in  here  there  were  good  men  to  spare”  (25).  

 

Like  most  of  Goran’s  Oaklanders,  Daly’s  life  is  deeply  rooted  in  the  neighbourhood:  

 

All  places  not  Oakland  were  not  real  to  [Daly].  He  had  learned  from  

geography  that  he  belonged  somewhere  more  than  anywhere  else.  

And,  he  knew  with  age,  there  were  people  who  did  not  feel  they  

belonged  anywhere  at  all.  Or  needed  to  go  somewhere  else  to  feel  

that  the  place  they  had  come  from  was  where  they  really  belonged.  

 

When  he  was  away  from  the  streets  of  Oakland  he  had  only  been  

putting  in  time  till  he  could  return  to  beloved  landmarks  of  memory…  

Daly  supposed  he  would  never  be  able  to  casually  pass  like  a  vague  

shadow  over  a  foreign  street  and  claim  kinship  to  the  place,  as  

irrelevant  as  the  breeze…  Today,  to  travel  was  to  seem  to  express  

freedom,  leisure,  an  ability  to  choose  locales  and  friends,  landmarks,  

natural  wonders  and  to  don  added  physical  presence  in  food,  love  

and  sex,  an  identity  in  mobility.  Daly  felt  no  more  free,  no  less,  no  

matter  where  he  was.    

(122-­‐23)    

 

At  a  further  extreme  is  Doc  Pierce  (aka  Rest  in  Peace),  an  Oakland  barfly,  who  says:  

“Being  out  of  Pittsburgh  for  some  of  us  is  like  being  in  purgatory.  Don’t  leave  town  

again,  it  disorientates  you”  (149-­‐150).  

 

19

 

Even  with  his  medical  death  sentence,  Daly  continues  to  look  after  the  less  fortunate  

and  the  wayward  of  Oakland.  He  takes  a  nightmarishly  dysfunctional  family  to  dinner  

in  an  act  of  respect  to  the  deceased  patriarch.  He  allows  the  dead  man’s  children  to  

steal  his  shirts,  socks  and  cufflinks.  He  lends  money  to  the  son  in  a  dubious  

emergency.  These  seemingly  masochistic  acts  are  actually  therapeutic  for  Daly:  “At  

small  price  he  had  liberated  the  neat,  constrained  part  of  himself  that  yearned  to  see  

the  helpless  know  small  pleasures,  what  the  rest  of  the  world  comes  to  by  birth”  (23)  

He  visits  his  dying  Uncle  Finnerty,  continues  his  courtship  with  Jessie  (a  blind  

woman),  and  supports  his  spinster  sister  Ruth  Marie.  He  legally  represents  a  drunken  

and  delusional  boy  who  claims  to  have  murdered  a  man  with  an  axe;  it  was  actually  a  

heart  attack.  When  Robert  Kennedy  is  assassinated,  Daly  and  some  friends  travel  to  

New  York  for  the  funeral.  They  ditch  the  long  queue  outside  St  Patrick’s  Cathedral  to  

go  whoring.  Unlike  his  friends,  Daly  does  not  sleep  with  his  delegated  prostitute  but  

elects  to  talk  with  her  about  heaven  and  hell.  He  counsels  people  threatening  suicide,  

gives  money  to  unfortunates.  He  is  a  quiet  saint  of  the  streets.  Late  at  night,  when  the  

streets  are  empty,  he  thinks  he  is  “at  his  best  at  such  a  time  when  everything  closed  

down,  nothing  to  be  said,  no  one  to  be  rescued.  He  could  not  help,  he  could  not,  for  

quiet  was  in  him  and  not  injustice  raging  to  be  cured,  hurt  anyone”  (239-­‐40).  

 

The  streets  of  Oakland  hold  for  Daly  a  kind  of  map  to  his  self.  For  Daly,  “Each  walk  

down  Robinson…  held  a  thousand  low  Irish  voices  from  his  past,  sitting  on  their  

porches,  murmuring  in  his  ears  of  lost  worlds  before  their  eyes,  and  now  themselves  

fading  shadows  in  the  streets  of  the  unremembered”  (168).  His  obsessive  

remembrances  are  checked  with  aching  awareness  of  the  transitory  nature  of  this  

urban  landscape  and  its  community:    

 

Without  asking,  Silk  drove  with  Daly  to  Robinson  Street  and  turned  

up  the  hill  past  St  Agnes.  Again,  Daly  remembered  the  lost  gray  

afternoons  in  the  Pittsburgh  of  his  boyhood,  streetlights  often  lit  at  

noon,  even  then  failing  to  penetrate  the  haze  of  smoke  and  dust  and  

fumes  and  sulphur  on  the  air;  streets  too  dark  in  Oakland  to  see  a  dog  

from  three  feet  away,  a  person  until  he  or  she  spoke  into  one’s  ear,  

20

houses  blending  into  each  other  as  he  trudged  again  up  to  Robinson  

from  St.  Agnes’s  Church  on  the  corner  of  Robinson  and  Fifth  to  the  

Morgan  Street  Cemetery,  desolate  and  broken-­‐backed  with  untended  

tombstones  at  the  top  of  the  hill.  It  was  a  land  of  illusions  and  

certainty  in  belief.  But  it  was  us,  on  the  streets  and  in  all  the  houses,  

in  all  our  foolish  glory,  the  merging  of  us  in  the  sunlight  the  same  as  

fog,  Daly  thought,  that  was  the  beauty  of  it,  and  the  mystery  was  why  

we  came  to  separate.    

(167)  

 

At  the  beginning  of  the  novel,  we  are  introduced  to  the  urban  landscape  as  of  1968.  

The  University  is  described  as  some  sort  of  omnivorous  beast:  

 

The  University  of  Pittsburgh,  whose  marriage  with  its  neighbors  had  

always  been  shaky  to  disloyal,  gobbled  up  hillsides,  parts  of  Schenley  

Park,  streets  and  parts  of  streets,  and  changed  the  patterns  of  traffic.  

The  university  bought  hospitals  and  lots  where  there  had  been  

restaurants  and  shoemaker  shops  on  Forbes  and  reached  

everywhere  into  parking  meters  and  homes.  They  maintained  their  

own  police  force  to  roam  Oakland,  as  if  one  more  was  needed.  

Parking  lots  stood  where  once  one  knew  the  names  of  everyone  in  a  

certain  house:  uncles,  cousins,  and  cats  and  dogs.  Gone.  Brushed  

aside  by  an  idea  going  somewhere:  The  university  would  expand,  

tentacled  and  grasping  at  ground  as  if  it  needed  the  oxygen  of  places  

to  keep  a  large  land  beast  from  suffocating  by  being  confined.    

(5-­‐6)  

 

Daly’s  drinking  friend,  Vanish,  describes  the  university  with  the  metaphors  of  war:  

“We’re  under  the  guns,  too,  from  the  Pitt  machine  creeping  down  on  us  from  the  top  

of  the  hill.  There’s  tennis  courts  and  medical  buildings  menacing  us,  and  black  people  

advancing  on  all  sides:  seige  [sic.]  in  all  but  tanks  and  warfare”  (107).  

 

Daly,  in  a  good  mood  after  a  drinking  session  with  friends,  walks  by  the  Morgan  St  

Cemetery  behind  Terrace  Village  II.  “Behind  him  one  of  the  buildings  of  the  Pitt  

Medical  School  sat  on  a  ridge  above  where  he  lay  on  the  grass  and  ate  the  eggs  and  

 

21

pretzels”  (117).  For  Daly  the  city  is  a  playground  for  memory  and  fantasy.  He  

hallucinates  and  enacts  a  scene  where  he  helps  ‘Pretty  Boy’  Floyd  escape  from  the  

police.  He  remembers  when  couples  would  make  love  in  the  cemetery,  which  is  also  

due  for  destruction.  He  reflects  that  “the  idea  of  the  cemetery  itself  [would  be]  

eradicated  when  the  last  person  who  thought  of  it  no  longer  remembered  the  

overgrown  trees  and  graves  and  forgot  the  touch  of  white  legs  and  lips  and  arms:  

When  it  was  bulldozed  and  shoved  out  of  the  path  of  tennis  courts  and  buildings  of  

Pitt,  dreams  of  love  would  be  buried,  too”  (118-­‐19).    

 

Late  in  the  novel  there  is  a  telling  scene  that  illustrates  the  estrangement  of  the  

working  Irish  from  academic  Oakland.  Daly  and  his  friend  Silk  enter  the  famous  

Cathedral  of  Learning  for  the  first  time  to  buy  coffee.  Their  only  previous  experience  

of  the  place  had  been  as  young  men  lurking  outside,  trying  to  pick  up  women  students  

who  were  thought  to  be  more  sexually  open  than  the  local  Irish  girls.  Daly  speaks  of  

“how  this  place  used  to  represent  money  and  sex  and  freedom  to  us…  and  never  a  

damned  thing  about  education.”  Daly  lightly  mocks  his  long-­‐standing  understanding  

of  the  estrangement  as  “a  racket  going  for  centuries,  them  what  thinks  they  have  the  

superiority  handed  to  them  by  paying  tuition,  and  them  what  believes  the  

propaganda  and  accepts  the  crumbs  from  the  table”  (258).  Daly  comes  to  realise  that  

the  students  are  just  as  scared  of  the  working  Oakland  Irish  as  the  Irish  are  of  these  

seemingly  privileged  students.  

 

There  is  finally  in  Goran’s  late  work  a  kind  of  reconciliation  with  the  bulldozing  

nature  of  time.  Goran  spoke  to  me  about  “the  infinite  smallness  of  the  mind,  the  ego”  

in  relation  to  one’s  environment,  the  ability  of  place  to  be  “everything  that’s  a  

definition  of  [the  self].”  However,  the  inevitable  “pile  of  rubble  obviously  is  not  

something  the  Pittsburgh  Authority  or  the  University  of  Pittsburgh  destroys,  the  pile  

of  rubble  is  simply  the  way  life  is  demonstrated  to  us.  Galaxies  and  universes  are  

being  destroyed”  (Goran  2008).  

 

Bing  Crosby’s  Last  Song  is  the  Irish  Club  milieu  at  its  terminus,  and  may  finally  be  seen  

as  a  coda  to  Goran’s  extensive  (and  ongoing)  project  of  “[perpetuating]  a  cast  of  all  

the  unremembered  delegates  from  an  abandoned  time.”  Goran’s  Pittsburgh  writings  

22

map  the  evolution  of  a  twentieth  century  city  through  the  subjective  experience  of  his  

underclass  and  working  class  characters.  The  few  miles  from  ‘Sobaski’s  Stairway’  to  

the  Irish  Club  represent  to  Goran  the  great  leap  of  his  life.  He  has  remained  loyal  to  

these  neighbourhoods.  

 This  paper  was  first  presented  at  the  Interdisciplinary  Themes  conference  on  The  City:  Culture,  Society,  

Technology  at  Simon  Fraser  University  in  Vancouver,  Canada  (November  6-­‐7,  2009).  

An  earlier  version  of  this  text  appeared  in  Interdisciplinary  Themes  Journal  1.1  (2009)  

©  2009,  2014  Matthew  Asprey  Gear.  

 

ABOUT  THE  AUTHOR  

 

   

MATTHEW  ASPREY  GEAR  is  an  Australian  writer  and  academic.  He  holds  a  PhD  in  Media  Studies  from  

Macquarie  University  in  Sydney  and  has  lectured  extensively  on  cinema  and  creative  writing.  As  one  of  

the  founding  co-­‐editors  of  Contrappasso,  he  published  a  career-­‐ranging  2008  interview  with  Lester  

Goran  as  well  as  some  of  Goran's  final  short  stories  and  essays.    

Matthew  Asprey  Gear's  non-­‐fiction  has  appeared  in  The  Los  Angeles  Review  of  Books,  Senses  of  Cinema,  

and  PopMatters;  his  fiction  in  Island,  Extempore,  and  Over  My  Dead  Body!  A  novella,  Dog  City,  appeared  

in  Crime  Factory  16,  and  his  critical  study  of  Orson  Welles  is  forthcoming  from  Wallflower  

Books/Columbia  University  Press.    

See  http://www.matthewasprey.com  

 

 

23

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Clemetson,  Lynette.  2002.  Revival  for  a  Black  Enclave  in  Pittsburgh.  The  New  York  Times,  August  9.  

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