【Daughter in law Who Passed Out From Her Father in law’s Big Manhood】
On Cary Grant,Daughter in law Who Passed Out From Her Father in law’s Big Manhood Darryl Pinckney, and Whit Stillman
The Review’s Review

Cary Grant in North by Northwest.
During the COVIDconfinement and afterward, I watched around sixty films starring Cary Grant. What a comfort to have him in my mind before I slept. No matter if he is comic or desperate, self-possessed or wounded, romantic or cool, he is ridiculously good-looking and seems never to know this. I love it when he puts his hands on his waist and pushes his hips forward as if about to dive or perform some acrobatic trick. His slim, athletic torso and long arms are always tanned. Sometimes he wears a fine shimmering gold medal around his neck. I love his dark eyes that have not forgotten his youthful suffering. He makes me laugh when he rolls his eyes around with his own special brand of sophisticated nonchalance. Though he isn’t aggressive, he doesn’t seem weak either. I find him buoyantly masculine. I can’t resist watching him. A few days ago, on a flight to Los Angeles, I watched Alfred Hitchcock’s hugely entertaining thriller North by Northwestagain. Grant was fifty-five when he made this film and long past his box office peak in the screwball comedies that made him famous. In the Hitchcock film he wears a nice-fitting, light gray suit with a gray silk tie and cuff links. The suit gets dirty, sponged off and pressed, then dirty again. Grant’s hair is a little gray, too. I don’t wear ties anymore, but I would wear a tie worn by Cary Grant. North by Northwestappeared in 1959, around the time that he was experimenting with medical LSD and searching for more “peace of mind,” as he called it. I don’t really know what a great actor is, but I think Grant is sensational.
—Henri ColeRead Henri Cole’s recent essay on James Merrill here.
In a scene midway through Whit Stillman’s Barcelona, which I rewatched this week, the Spanish Marta (played by a not-so-Spanish Mira Sorvino) is explaining to patriotic American naval officer Fred why her friend Montserrat has left his also American cousin, Ted.
Ted’s romantic rival, she says—in close-up, in a possibly Catalan accent—has lectured Montserrat about the ills of American society:
And he painted a terrible picture of what it would be like for her to live the rest of her life in America, with all of its crime, consumerism, and vulgarity. All those loud, badly-dressed, fat people watching their eighty channels of television and visiting shopping malls. The plastic throw-everything-away society with its notorious violence and racism. And finally, the total lack of culture.
“It’s a problem,” agrees Fred.
—Rebecca PanovkaRead Rebecca Panovka’s culture diary, which chronicles a week of June in New York, here.
I usually start my summer by reading Sleepless Nights, mostly because of the opening sentences: “It is June. This is what I have decided to do with my life just now.” My love for reading Elizabeth Hardwick is matched only by my love for reading about Elizabeth Hardwick, so it’s only fitting that I’m finishing the summer reading Come Back in September: A Literary Education on West Sixty-Seventh Street, Manhattanby Darryl Pinckney. The memoir, which will be released in October, is an impressionistic recollection of Pinckney’s early years as a writer in New York City, when he was fresh out of school and trying to learn who he wanted to be by studying Hardwick, his former professor, as well as Barbara Epstein, his new editor at TheNew York Review of Books. I especially liked Pinckney’s anecdotes: Hardwick bringing home a cardboard box of what would become Sleepless Nights but was then called “The Cost of Living”; dinners and joints with Hardwick’s daughter Harriet; and nights spent watching the B-52s perform. It’s a portrait of a special phase in many young lives, when our relationships with the people who have the greatest influence on us can feel both fated and random.
—Haley MlotekRead Haley Mlotek’s essay on the perils of the month of August here.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 5, 2025
2025-06-26 03:06Apple's iOS 15.4 beta lets you add COVID
2025-06-26 02:18Why John Clare Hated the First
2025-06-26 02:13A Day at an Upper West Side Bank
2025-06-26 02:13The Baffler’s May Day Round Up
2025-06-26 01:52Popular Posts
Best robot vacuum deal: Save $200 on Eufy X10 Pro Omni robot vacuum
2025-06-26 02:59Beelzebub's Closeup, and Other News
2025-06-26 02:50The Plum Tree on West 83rd Street
2025-06-26 02:20Why John Clare Hated the First
2025-06-26 01:55Waymo data shows humans are terrible drivers compared to AI
2025-06-26 01:18Featured Posts
Put Me In, Coach!
2025-06-26 03:38Individualizing Books: A 1759 Hand
2025-06-26 03:27Staff Picks: Coates, Cartels, Caesar, Cigarettes by The Paris Review
2025-06-26 03:00How to clear cache on Chrome
2025-06-26 02:10The Mismeasure of Media
2025-06-26 01:21Popular Articles
Ryzen 5 1600X vs. 1600: Which should you buy?
2025-06-26 03:27Apple's iOS 15.4 beta lets you add COVID
2025-06-26 02:52Antoine Volodine on Writing Post
2025-06-26 01:20The Baffler’s May Day Round Up
2025-06-26 01:11Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (997)
Impression Information Network
Mary Shows Up
2025-06-26 03:39Palm Information Network
How to use Personal Voice in iOS 17
2025-06-26 03:31Inheritance Information Network
Beware the Mineshaft of Books
2025-06-26 03:27Opportunity Information Network
Linda Rosenkrantz on Her Book “Talk,” Fifty Years Later
2025-06-26 01:55New Knowledge Information Network
Put Me In, Coach!
2025-06-26 01:52