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But Kelly, a New York native who grew up surrounded by aunts, uncles and other relatives with rich Irish accents, believes that success can come with a price, as he feels it has for the Irish. "By becoming really, fully American," he said in a recent phone interview, the Irish "lost a bit of what shaped them, the experiences their forbears had, and they lost their grip on urban America. People don't think of the Irish as these urban people, but I think they invented the urban style and urban attitudes." That belief has informed Kelly's desire to inhabit an earlier time, when hundreds of thousands of Irish immigrants just off the boat mingled in the nation's cities with the descendants of those who arrived years earlier. It was a period, too, when the presence of Irish-Americans loomed large in city halls and governor's mansions throughout the country.
"My first two books were set very much during the afternoon, if not the twilight, of the Irish-American experience in New York," Kelly said, referring to "Payback" and "The Rackets," novels that both take place in the 1970s and '80s. With "Empire Rising," he added, "It was kind of fun to go back to 1930." As he wrote the novel, Kelly, a former construction worker himself, thought vividly of what life must have been like for the men involved in building the structure, a feat of architecture that took only a year and 45 days to rise, still a record for a skyscraper of such height. Many of the workers were Irish-Americans, one factor that drew Kelly to the subject. He thought, too, about the women in their lives, as well as the historical figures who appear in his novel — those like Mayor Jimmy Walker; Franklin Roosevelt, New York's governor at the time; and cultural icons like Lewis Hine, the photographer, and Babe Ruth. And he thought, finally, about his own family.
The real Michael Briody "met a certain fate in the Bronx that was never clearly explained (to the family)," Kelly said. "So I decided to go ahead and write a book to explain it to myself." The other character, Grace Masterson, is an artist who, after migrating to these shores, lived on a houseboat in the East River. Some of her "back story" is based on one of the author's great-aunts, a woman of tremendous spirit and independence who lived on a houseboat in Brooklyn, said the author, a resident of New York's Upper West Side. Like other immigrants, Kelly's Irish-born relatives left behind everything they knew "to come to the New World and get a fresh start. It's certainly not an original story," he said, "but it's my unique, family version of the story, and I wanted to write about that."
Kelly, who grew up in the Bronx and in New Milford, N.J., a suburb close to New York, said he thought of becoming a writer even as a teenager. He was certainly an avid reader, he recalled, gobbling up books by the likes of Henry Roth, Pietro di Donato and James T. Farrell, whose fiction helped record the immigrant experience.
Feeling that college just wasn't in the cards for him, Kelly gravitated toward construction work as a 15-year-old and stayed in the field until he was 25. He often cut class to work in the field, barely completing high school, and spent his last four years in construction as a sandhog — "the guys," he said, "who build all the tunnels." It was only after he turned 20, after his father's death, that Kelly enrolled in a junior college, a decision motivated partly by guilt and partly by the desire for a better job. "I felt bad because all he ever said was, 'Don't be like me; get an education,' and, of course, we ignored him," Kelly said. The "we" refers to the author and his two brothers. Their father, he added, worked in the railroad freight yards of the South Bronx. Kelly eventually attended Fordham University, where he studied political economy, and received a master's degree from Harvard's Kennedy School of Government in 1988. Already involved in union politics, he returned to New York and worked as the director of advance for Mayor David Dinkins' re-election campaign. By the time he graduated from Fordham, Kelly, then 26, had also begun his career as an author, jumping right into his first novel, "Payback." He did so without as much as taking a writing class beforehand or composing a short story. "I just kept at it and kept at it and kept at it," Kelly said — the kind of gritty, disciplined, no-holds-barred approach that the author seems to have followed throughout his life. "Payback" involves the construction trade and "the Irish mob," as well as the Mafia and the FBI, according to its book jacket. But the heart of the novel rests on three brothers, one of whom is a sandhog planning to enter law school. Sounds like it could be at least partly autobiographical. And so, too, does "The Rackets," Kelly's second novel, in which a former "roughneck" construction worker, now Ivy-educated, works as an advance man for the mayor of New York. Kelly agreed that much of the action is autobiographical — "the idea of someone involved in unions and politics" — but "all the other stuff," including his characters' inner lives, is fictional. "Every now and then, there'll be some sort of composite [in his books]," said Kelly, who, with his sturdy build and balding pate, could still pass as the sandhog he once was. But none of his novels have included "a strict representation or even an interpretation" of anyone he knows.
But Kelly views his heritage through the larger prism of being American. "You're an American first," he said, "and all this other stuff is flavor." Similarly, the author regards himself as an American writer, first and foremost, and only then as an Irish-American author. "The stories I tell aren't unique to the Irish," he said. American Jews have had a similar experience, as have Italian, Polish and Haitian immigrants. Having played a role in politics himself, Kelly still has strong views about the subject. He considers himself liberal, but pragmatic, and the one figure he most admires, past or present, is Martin Luther King Jr. But Kelly, referring to politics as "very much part of my past," said he prefers to discuss writing and storytelling, the two pillars of his new trade. Various critics have described Kelly's writing as urban, dynamic, intensely heartfelt and as "tart as the street talk of the city." Joe Klein, reviewing "Empire Rising" in The New York Times Book Review, wrote of "a compelling muscularity to his work," with plots that "barrel along" and a dialogue that rings of authenticity. For his part, Kelly, who reports occasionally for Esquire magazine, said he tries to write vividly. "I try to move the characters and narrative along, so maybe that's what (Klein) was getting at."
But Kelly, who declined to name any of those who have approached him, makes no conscious effort to write cinematically. "I just start with character," he said, his approach with all three novels. In the case of "Empire Rising," I didn't really know where the characters were going to end up. I come up with character, and everything flows out of that." Kelly today is working on a new book — a novel about the rise and fall of post-World War II New York — although progress is slow, he said, and "it takes me a while to get up to speed. ... It's somehow going to involve the detective bureau, but I'm staring at a blank page as we speak." Someday, Kelly said, he might try to write "the great Irish-Jewish New York novel," reflecting what the author believes has been a cordial relationship between the two groups that has received little, if any, attention. "No one's really gotten into that," he added. WGT
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