“WHEN THE PANDEMIC hit,” the author and critic Darryl Pinckney tells me, “this mood came on me to remember what felt, at the time, like a golden age.”
His resulting memoir, Come Back in September, out from FSG, recalls Pinckney’s education under and friendship with Elizabeth Hardwick and Barbara Epstein, cofounders of The New York Review of Books, from taking Hardwick’s 1973 writing class at Barnard through 1989, when he was regularly contributing to the Review. The author, drawing from his diaries, offers a tender and unvarnished glimpse of two cultural milieus: his agemates’—Lucy Sante, Sigrid Nunez—and that of Hardwick, Epstein, and Susan Sontag: “the three stars of the great table of contents that was Manhattan,” he writes. He name-dropped Hardwick to James Baldwin, was witness to her divorce from…