NEW YORK TIMES
29 October 1961
THE WATERMELON WAGON
by David Boroff
Writing, by its very nature, is a sophisticated act. The writer,
therefore, who deliberately cultivates the artless and the
naïve skirts the danger of a specious primitivism, a fraudulent
purity of feeling. We have seen William Saroyan, with his backyard
pastorals, flash brilliantly for a while and then molder neglected.
His sense of wonder had long since become cloying; his freshness
had staled.
In "A Lost King," by Raymond DeCapite, there is
an engaging immersion in a Saroyanesque world. The old simplicities
of feeling, the insistent sentimentalities have an authority
one would think had long vanished. Mr. DeCapite’s characters
are full of whimsy and vagrant impulse, and of that startling
departure from common sense which--at least in this kind of
novel—is often itself loftier common sense.
Carl Christopher is a powerful beached whale of a man. In
his happier days, he had been a crane operator in a Cleveland
steel mill. Now his work gloves lay, "like smashed swollen
hands," and he sits on his porch wondering where it all
started and where it would all end. Passionately vituperative,
he upbraids his complaisant daughter for her domestic insufficiencies
("You couldn’t hold a dog in the house with this
food: he’d rip your apron off"), and his son Paul
for his dreamy, ne’er-do-well ways. ("This boy plays
the harmonica and forgets where his shoes are.")
It is Paul who provides the moral center of the novel. He
is a kind of inept Huckleberry Finn whose misadventures in
love and work are at once comic and moving. In an ambiance
of small catastrophe, he moves from one job to another--meat
slicer in a super market, loader of potashy gags, machine tender
in a factory. After each failure, he ritualistically buys heaps
of food for this father and cheerfully returns to his true
spiritual home, atop the watermelon wagon with an old neighborhood
friend. This is a life he understands.
"Everyone was delighted to see us and it seemed a perfectly
wonderful way to make a living. All that day we were out in
the fresh air and sunlight. Round us was the sweetness of watermelon
like cut grass. Deep in the gold of the afternoon, we sold
out and I lay back in the wagon to watch the sky and listen
to the quickening clip-clop of the horse Tina."
Old Carl Christopher, to be sure, is as much a misfit as harmonica
playing Paul. A crusty old tyrant with a kind of exasperated
tenderness for his son, he spouts the American gospel of success,
but he is desolate with the thought of his own fading powers.
("It’s like a knife in my heart when I remember
how strong I used to be.") After a party in honor of his
sixtieth birthday, he quietly dies.
In its limpid currents of feeling, "A Lost King" has
a faintly archaic flavor. Yet it is as persuasively charming
novel. Paul has a gentle and generous lyricism. "Something
good is happening," he cries out. "I feel it in the
air. Do you realize a baby’s being born every five seconds
or so?" Moreover, there are howlingly funny moments in
this novel: the chief butcher in the super market shouting
at the apprentices "Attack, attack," as they wield
their flashing knives; or Paul protesting when his father complains
that his girlfriend is bow-legged. "I know, I know, I
wanted a bow-legged girl."
"A Lost King" resolves no existential dilemmas,
but it is a warm and winning novel which says "yes" to
life. It should give delight to many readers.
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