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325 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1997
The people she admired in his books were people who walked away from the lives that other people expected them to live—Ellen in his first novel, the bohemian painters in his second. He had dwelled—in those early books, at least—on the glory of choosing your own life, even when it takes ruthlessness to do it.And here's what she observes as she gets to know Schiller:
But now it occurred to her that he had only written about the beginning of the journey. He had never shown the consequences of the choice—never shown what happened to these people ten and twenty and thirty years down the line. And she felt that she was seeing the consequences, every day, in what she was seeing of him.This is also the story of younger people observing older people. Here's an observation from Schiller's thirty-nine-year-old daughter, Ariel, who's in the "disorderly middle of life," witnessing her father in the hospital room of a dying friend, talking as they always do about writers and books:
To Ariel it seemed as if they were averting their eyes from the larger questions. But maybe their way was better than hers—maybe they were serving eternity precisely by staying faithful to daily life. If she didn’t understand her father’s friends, she felt that they didn’t even come close to understanding her. Though as intellectuals they probably liked to think that “nothing human was alien to them,” she found them narrow in their interests: the only thing they thrilled to, really, was the written word. Ariel was outside their radar.In other words, the whole life process is observed from all angles with honesty. Why are we here? What are we doing? These are the questions Schiller explores:
The primary human need, he decided—stronger than the need for food or sex or love—is the need for recognition, the need to make a mark in the world. One makes one’s mark according to one’s capacities. If you have talents, you exercise them: if you’re Mozart you write The Magic Flute. And if you don’t have any talents, you thrust yourself into the path of others in cruder ways: you wear stupid T-shirts or you become the impresario of the back of the bus. And if your life has been stunted from the first by violence and harsh surroundings, then you steal things or destroy things or hurt people: anything, anything, to leave an image of yourself in other people’s minds.Poignant, wise, sometimes humorous, sometimes heartbreaking, Starting Out in the Evening is a kind of languorous tour through Manhattan and aging.