
Murder, Lust and Obscene Wealth in a City on Edge
Chicky Diaz, the title character of Chris Pavone's new novel, has worked at the Bohemia, one of the Upper West Side's grandest apartment buildings, for nearly three decades. Along with fetching packages, hailing cabs and ignoring the often egregious behavior of the spoiled occupants, he serves as a buffer against the outside world. It's his job to keep the chaos out.
But reality in all its unpleasantness has a way of penetrating even a faux-medieval castle surrounded by a wrought-iron fence topped with golden spikes, as the people in the building are about to find out. The action unfolds over a single tumultuous day that begins with an ominous intimation — someone might get killed before it's over — and gathers force like an impending storm.
Pavone is the author of five previous books, literary thrillers characterized by elegant writing and intricate plotting. This is something bigger in tone and ambition. While a mystery hums beneath the narrative — who won't make it out of the book alive? — 'The Doorman' is better read as a state-of-the-city novel, a kaleidoscopic portrait of New York at a singularly strange moment.
As the day goes on, demonstrators protesting the latest killing of a Black man by a white cop are amassing reinforcements and heading to Billionaire's Row on 57th Street, home to a cluster of obscenely tall buildings featuring grotesquely overpriced apartments. A counterprotest of white 'law-and-order MAGA-capped dudes, the stand-your-grounders,' is also building steam, bolstered by more white men in fatigues and bulletproof vests riding around in pickup trucks flying Confederate flags.
Chicky's immediate concern is what to do if the revolution (or the counter-revolution) comes to the Bohemia. But he has longer-term worries, including an unwitting beef with a thug named El Puño and crushing debt totaling $300,000, mostly from medical bills accrued during his beloved late wife's battle with cancer. (This while working in a building where he once overheard someone bark into the phone: 'It's what … 80 million dollars? Ninety. Whatever. It's nothing.')
Even as he digs into Chicky's life, Pavone gives equal time to a host of other memorable characters, all connected by a restless dissatisfaction that is magnified by the city itself. 'The corrosive thing about New York is that there's always someone with more — more money, more fame, more power, more respect,' he writes.
There's Emily Longworth in apartment 11 C-D, for instance, caught in the maw of Pavone's equal-opportunity satire — weaponized over-wokeness coming from the left and enraged proto-fascism coming from the right. On the one hand, she's married to a loathsome man who has made billions selling a new kind of body armor to warlords and fundamentalists and who, when she mentions her volunteer work at a food pantry, snaps: 'Nobody's forcing you to spoon out slop to illegal immigrants.'
On the other, she has a daughter who wonders whether the family should 'do a land acknowledgment' before dinner to recognize the territory 'stolen from ingenious peoples … who were slaughtered in a holocaust' and who announces that her teacher — the one who wore a 'Tax the Rich' T-shirt t,o Parents' Day — 'used to be mister but now they is mix.'
'Are you sure that's the right, um … verb agreement?'' Emily asks.
Meanwhile, her father, a lifelong New York Democrat, 'told a dirty joke at work, got called out by a young woman of color, canceled, bought out of his partnership, career over, and suddenly he was watching Fox News day and night.'
With its laser-sharp satire, its delicious set pieces in both rich and poor neighborhoods — a co-op board meeting, a Harlem food pantry and more — and its portrait of a restive city torn apart by inequality, resentment and excess, 'The Doorman' naturally invites comparison to 'The Bonfire of the Vanities,' Tom Wolfe's lacerating dissection of New York in the 1980s.
(Let us adjust for inflation. Sherman McCoy, 'Bonfire''s master-of-the-universe main character, struggled to get by on his $1 million salary as a bond trader. One of Pavone's characters has made more than $500 million selling his bubble-wrap company to a conglomerate.)
No one can beat the muscularity of Wolfe's prose or the savagery of his satire. But Pavone's humor is more humane, his sympathy for the characters' struggles and contradictions more acute. With his eye for absurdity and ear for nuance, he seems as if he's writing not from some elevated place high above the city, but from within it.
How, in a single book, can you characterize a place and a time this varied and this unwieldy? If 'The Doorman' suffers from anything, it's a surfeit of riches — details and digressions that can lead you away from the central story. But all of it accelerates into a tour de force ending (this is where it becomes a thriller) that rewards close attention. I had to read it twice to make sure I understood exactly who did what to whom.
I'm not sure where Pavone stands at this bewildering cultural moment — whether he has any answers, and not just questions. But maybe the last word should go to the Bohemia's superintendent, Olek, a Ukrainian immigrant who has found the freedom to be a gay man in New York (though not at work, on account of his co-workers' homophobic jokes).
'Americans were complacent, with their Miranda rights and public defenders, their supermarkets and free vaccinations, their Grindr, their Chelsea,' he thinks. 'Everyday luxuries made it hard to anticipate worst-case scenarios. Americans thought the world was ending if their electricity went out and they couldn't charge their phones to post on Instagram. They had no idea.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
12 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Elon Musk pulls back on threat to withdraw Dragon spacecraft
As President Donald Trump and Elon Musk argued on social media on Thursday, the world's richest man threatened to decommission a space capsule used to take astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station. A few hours later, Musk said he wouldn't follow through on the threat. After Trump threatened to cut government contracts given to Musk's SpaceX rocket company and his Starlink internet satellite services, Musk responded via X that SpaceX 'will begin decommissioning its Dragon spacecraft immediately.'


Fox News
15 minutes ago
- Fox News
Reagan National Airport to halt flights for Trump-hosted military parade next week
President Donald Trump will be hosting a military parade next Saturday honoring military veterans and active-duty service members to commemorate the U.S. Army's birthday. The parade is scheduled for June 14, the 250th birthday of the United States Army, Flag Day, and Trump's birthday. Ronald Reagan National Airport (DCA) announced the airport is expected to halt flights during the parade. "To accommodate aircraft flyovers along the parade route, followed by a fireworks display, the Federal Aviation Administration is expected to suspend airline operations at DCA – affecting scheduled flights," reads an airport press release. The airport cautions that "customers with flight reservations for the evening of June 14 should check the status of their flights directly with their airline." An FAA spokesperson told Fox News Digital the agency is working with the Department of Defense to finalize a flyover plan detailing the number and types of aircraft involved. Temporary Flight Restrictions (TFRs) for the Washington, D.C., area will be issued in partnership with the Department of Homeland Security "to ensure safety and security during the celebration." Fox News Digital is told the restrictions will expand the Washington, D.C., Metropolitan Area Special Flight Rules Area (DC SFRA) and the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Area Flight Restricted Zone (DC FRZ). "The FAA will implement traffic management initiatives (TMI) at DCA before, during, and after the event to ensure safety and will facilitate a return to normal operations once the event concludes. During the peak of the celebration, the TMI stops all arrivals and departures," said the FAA spokesperson. The parade is scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. and conclude at 9:30 p.m. Flight passengers are advised to use the D.C. Metrorail to reach the airport and can expect roadway closures off-airport to increase the travel time. There will be "no fireworks viewing" due to construction and event parking is strongly discouraged, says the DCA release. "Expect delays from road closures and increased pedestrian and vehicle traffic in the area," it states. The landmark event will take place on Constitution Ave NW between 15th Street and 23rd Street. At the event, there will be historical U.S. Army personnel re-enactors, period-accurate equipment, vehicles, flyovers and military bands, according to America250. "The event is designed not only to showcase the Army's modern capabilities but also to inspire a new generation to embrace the spirit of service, resilience, and leadership that defines the United States," the America250 site says.

Associated Press
15 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Sean 'Diddy' Combs' ex-girlfriend resumes testimony about his sexual interests
NEW YORK (AP) — Sean 'Diddy' Combs ' recent ex-girlfriend returned to the witness stand Friday in his sex trafficking trial, after testifying that he pressured her into drug-fueled sex marathons similar to those described by another former girlfriend, R&B singer Casandra 'Cassie' Ventura. The woman using the pseudonym 'Jane' is among several witnesses at the trial — now at the end of its fourth week — who accuse Combs of violence, including Cassie. Combs, 55, has pleaded not guilty to running his business empire as a racketeering enterprise that enabled and concealed the abuse of women over two decades. If convicted, he faces 15 years to life. Prosecutors questioned Jane about sexual subjects right from the start Friday, beginning with a 2023 trip to Las Vegas where Jane said she and Combs had a 'hotel night' with an 'entertainer.' Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey asked if Combs ever used the word 'freak.' Jane said he would say 'he wants his freak.' She said she understood that to mean 'he wanted me to be wild and sexual.' Her description of 'hotel nights' has closely paralleled Cassie's earlier testimony about numerous ' freak-offs ' she had with male sex workers under Combs' direction. Jane said during her first day of testimony Thursday that she repeatedly told Combs, in person and in writing, that she didn't want to have sex with other men. But Combs, who paid her rent and controlled other parts of her life, kept pressuring her and she felt 'obligated' to take part in the 'hotel nights,' she said. Jane said Thursday that she got to know Combs during a 'girls trip' to Miami in 2020 and dated him from 2021 to 2024. She said it began as a loving and passionate relationship, but he soon began sharing his fantasies involving her with other men and role playing. She said she came to regret it. After May 2021, she said 90% of the times she had sex during her relationship with Combs, it was with other men while he watched. Asked if she wanted to have sex with other men, Jane softly said, 'No… just Sean.' Both Jane and Cassie have described trying to rush through the encounters just to get them over with. Jane said the encounters sometimes lasted over 24 hours. The judge has taken steps to protect Jane's anonymity, including warning observers not to describe or sketch her in a way that would reveal her identity. The Associated Press does not identify people who say they're victims of sexual abuse unless they choose to make their names public, as Cassie has done. On Thursday, Judge Arun Subramanian threatened to eject Combs from the courtroom if he continued 'nodding vigorously' at jurors, telling lawyers that there should be no attempts by him to have an interaction with the jury. ___ Collins reported from Hartford, Connecticut.