This weekâs edition of The New Yorkerâs annual anniversary issue includes a never-before-published piece by Joseph Mitchell, one of the magazineâs most celebrated contributors.
The piece, titled âStreet Life,â was given to the magazine by Thomas Kunkel, whoâs writing a biography of Mitchell, who died in 1996. (âGenius in Disguise,â Mr. Kunkelâs biography of The New Yorkerâs founder, Harold Ross, was published in 1995.) Mr. Kunkel, provided access to Mitchellâs papers, found three excerpts of what appears to be an uncompleted memoir.
Mitchell grew up in North Carolina, and was a staff writer for The New Yorker from 1938 until his death, though he didnât publish anything in the magazine after âJoe Gouldâs Secretâ in 1964. Mitchellâs profiles of the cityâs characters are legendary, and much of âStreet Lfeâ is an ode to traveling around his adopted home: âI frequently spend an entire day riding on New York City buses, getting off at junction points and changing from one line to another as the notion strikes me and gradually criss-crossing whatever part of the city I happen to be in. I might ride in a dozen or fifteen or twenty different buses during the day.â
âWhatâs so poignant about [the excerpts] is the sadness of the incompletion but the brilliance of the voice,â David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, said in an interview. âThereâs an ambition in the voice; the voice is becoming more Joycean. Heâs looking outward, but all of these pieces are very interior. Heâs at the center of it.â
Mr. Remnick said the magazine plans to publish the remaining two excerpts, at a time yet to be determined.