Reading Underworld
My 1998 paperback featuring an ominous photo of the World Trade Center on the cover. These towers would fall three years later. “ It is all falling indelibly into the past.” That line appears early in Don DeLillo’s Underworld and serves as a wonderful encapsulation of the entire novel. Everything in the book is falling into the past. The Cold War. The Polo Grounds. Bobby Thomson’s home run. J. Edgar Hoover. Lenny Bruce. The Cuban Missile Crisis. Nixon. The Zapruder film. The Bronx. The great postwar promise of American life. The garbage that promise produced. It is all falling, but it is not disappearing. That is the key. It falls indelibly. It leaves marks. I first read Underworld not long after it appeared. My copy is the 1998 Scribner first paperback edition, the one with the epic, ominous photograph of the World Trade Center on the cover. All page references here are to that edition. I doubt DeLillo chose the cover. That was almost certainly a publisher’s decision. September ...