OHIOANA QUARTERLY
Spring 1962
by Robert Price
Raymond DeCapite was born in 1926 in Cleveland where he is
now living. He holds an M.A. in English from Western Reserve
University. The Coming of Fabrizze (1960) was his first novel.
Paul Christopher seemed touched, but with exactly what was
a troublous question, though it must have been with something
more than the whiskey his father, in indulgent moments, put
in his coffee. Greeks would have said it was the gods, the
Irish the fairies. Paul's Italian father mostly swore, then
alternated between cuffings and excessive kindness before giving
in to desperation at the whimsical fancies and irresponsibilities
of his late-come and deeply loved son. The mother had died
when Paul was only a stripling. Then Nina, the older sister,
had married, leaving him to grow up through high school doing
the cooking and housework and more and more looking after the
father who, after hard years in the steelmills, was retiring
to social security and broken health.
Paul is the central character in Raymond DeCapite's second
novel, A Lost King, published last September. Like the winsome
hero of The Coming of Fabrizze (1960), Mr. DeCapite's Paul
Christopher has some very great problems, and they do not all
arrive merely from the Italo-American environment so sensitively
depicted. Paul, too, has to cope with something fundamental
within. Now that he is graduating at last from Lincoln High,
he appears to be completely incapable of finding a useful,
practical place in the adult working world of his day-laborer
neighborhood. Other boys from these Italian, Greek, and Polish
families seem fitted by nature to become bank clerks, or to
trim meat off beef bones for Big Deal Stores, or to hoist bags
of potash all day at the American Chemicals dock, or to feed
milk cartons into the endlessly hungry jaws of a gluing machine.
But not Paul. His mind is sensitive to every passing bit of
beauty and his fancy can spin witty and whimsical and often
charming nonsense, but he seems to be repelled by routines
and cannot keep his interest fixed on practicalities. He has
a gift for song that finds natural expression on a harmonica.
There seems to be only one job he can hold - selling watermelons
on Sam Ross's horse-and-wagon outfit. And there is only one
task in which he takes a vital interest - caring tenderly,
even though erratically, for his ailing father.
What comes of Paul's problem provides Mr. DeCapite's unusual
story. A Lost King is a strange and beautiful narrative. Like
The Coming of Fabrizze, it has a rare individuality in both
material and technique that has sent discriminating critics
into enthusiastic shouts of "little classic" and "an
evocative and oddly moving song." The Fabrizzes and Paul
Christophers of this world are indeed endowed with unusually
sensitive and often eerie insights. They have intensely emotional
and glowing personalities. They have the qualities, in other
words, that can send them to extremes of success and failure,
hope and despair and hope again. Most readers have never met
any one just like them - except perhaps within themselves,
for the stories became memorable in a highly personal way.
His Background
Raymond DeCapite is a native Clevelander, who draws the stuff
of his books from his family and community heritage. Both his
father and his maternal grandparents were immigrants from Italy.
A graduate of Cleveland schools, DeCapite attended Ohio University
and holds a B.A. from Cleveland College and an M.A. from Western
Reserve University. He knows the grubbier side of fighting
for a living too, we are told, having a worked, during his
years of winning an education and creating his first books,
as a shipping clerk, a restaurant employee, a cashier, a crane
oiler and a trade magazine hack writer. This background may
explain why these first novels seem to grow naturally out of
a very real and vital world of experience.
In no sense however, does Mr. DeCapite write a merely regional
or local-color story. It is very significant of the way he
views the story-telling act, I think, that even though both
Fabrizze and A Lost King are told largely in the simplest of
natural-seeming dialogue, the author eschews dialect almost
completely. Nevertheless, the talk is true to character. It
is in turn comic, tender, racy, idealistic, but it seems to
have little need for the distortions of speech and idiom or
for the excesses of cheap shock talk that are often used to
put mere surface on verisimilitude. True talk is made dynamic
by gist and intent, by the inner drives of character. Like
Paul Christopher's essential urge to find fullest expression
in his harmonica music, there is something in a DeCapite story
that seems always to be pushing for statement in poetry - never,
one hastens to add, with any lessening of the author's vigorous
masculine vitality. A young novelist who can accomplish effects
like these has much art already at his command. Since, we are
told, two more novels are already in manuscript, we may well
look ahead eagerly to see where Mr. DeCapite's fine controls
are moving.
But back to Paul Christopher. The dying father knows that
something must be done to jar this strange boy into growing
up. He finally resorts to the seemingly only course - he boots
him out. What happens next in this tender tragic-comic father
and son narrative is unforgettable.
--Robert Price, Chairman of the Department of English at Western
College. Mr. Price is a specialist in American literature.
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