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City WolfeAuthor talks up new novel, ‘Back to Blood’

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Wolfe sees his job as more than just filling notepads; he has figured out how it adds up. After hanging around with hippies and astronauts, bankers and cops, he has concluded the same questions nag them all: What will my peers think? How am I doing? It’s all about status, something “on everybody’s mind all the time.”

A believer that one should never exclude himself from his own theory, Wolfe is an old-fashioned striver, a Richmond, Va., native who was class president in high school and ran the student newspaper. He wanted to be a Great American Writer, in the Greatest American City: New York.

He hustled and wrote and dressed his way to the top. His apartment is a shining wonder, 12 rooms on the 14th floor of a doorman building on the Upper East Side. Depending on which way you turn your head, you could catch a view of Central Park or a lampshade in his office designed after the author’s signature Panama hat. Wolfe was interviewed in what might be called a sitting room, or a TV-less living room, or a yellow room — yellow walls, yellow radiators, yellow window shutters, yellow book cases, and Wolfe’s couch of choice, with its yellow corduroy design.

He’s been a novelist for 30 years, but he is also defined as a founder of the “New Journalism,” the now standard art of applying the techniques of fiction — dialogue, scene setting, rich, descriptive language — to nonfiction. His peers have included Jimmy Breslin, Gay Talese and the late Nora Ephron. His current favorites include Mark Bowden, best known for “Black Hawk Down,” and “Moneyball” author Michael Lewis.

“He is one of my heroes,” says Lewis, who has been reading Wolfe since he was a boy. “He led the way in showing how much could be crammed into a work of nonfiction.”

Wolfe is the least sedentary of writers and seeing him walk gamely around his apartment makes you wonder if he wasn’t ready for one of those quiet, introspective novels he so despises. But the ideas keep coming. Wolfe says he has at least six projects to keep him busy, including a nonfiction book on Charles Darwin and other evolutionary theorists and a fictional return to New York.


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