Santa Fe New Mexican

Legendary columnist had long love affair with New York City

- By Thalia Beaty

NEW YORK — Pete Hamill, the self-taught, streetwise newspaper columnist whose love affair with New York inspired a colorful and uniquely influentia­l journalist­ic career and produced several books of fiction and nonfiction, died Wednesday morning. He was 85.

Hamill died at a Brooklyn hospital from heart and kidney failure, his brother, Denis Hamill, confirmed in an email.

“Pete was truly one of the good guys,” Denis Hamill said.

Pete Hamill was one of the city’s last great crusading columnists and links to journalism’s days of chattering typewriter­s and smoked-filled banter, an Irish-American both tough and sentimenta­l who related to the underdog and mingled with the elite. Well read, well rounded and very well connected, Hamill was at ease quoting poetry and Ernest Hemingway, dating Jacqueline Onassis or enjoying a drink and a cigarette at the old Lion’s Head tavern in Greenwich Village.

His topics ranged from baseball, politics, murders, boxing and riots to wars in Vietnam, Nicaragua, Lebanon and Ireland. But he would always look back to the New York he grew up in, a pre-digital age best remembered through the dreamscape of black-and-white photograph­y — a New York of egg creams and 5-cent subway rides, stickball games and wide-brimmed hats, when the Dodgers were still in Brooklyn and there were more daily papers than you could count on one hand.

“I have the native son’s irrational love of the place,” Hamill wrote in his 2004 book, Downtown: My Manhattan. “New York is a city of daily irritation­s, occasional horrors, hourly tests of will and even courage, and huge dollops of pure beauty.”

A Brooklyn-born high school dropout, Hamill was a columnist for the New York Daily News, the New York Post, Newsday, the Village Voice, New York magazine and Esquire. He wrote screenplay­s, several novels and a bestsellin­g memoir, A Drinking Life.

“Pete Hamill was an inspiratio­n to generation­s of reporters who reveled in his unique style of storytelli­ng and his gifts as a writer and reporter who spoke truth to power,” the New York Press Club said in a statement.

His 2003 novel, Forever, told the story of Cormac O’Connor, an Irish Jew who arrives in New York in 1740 and is granted eternal life as long as he stays on the island of Manhattan. His novels Snow in August and The North River also served up nostalgic and critically acclaimed tales of old New York.

His memoir covers his childhood in Brooklyn to the night he gave up drinking at a New Year’s Eve party in 1972.

“Pete was a giant of journalism, a quintessen­tial New Yorker and a personal friend to my father and myself,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement. “I learned much from him and he inspired me. Pete’s death is going to leave a hole in the heart of New Yorkers.”

Hamill had a brief turn editing the New York Post. When financier Steven Hoffenberg gained control of the tabloid in bankruptcy proceeding­s, he hired Hamill as editor-in-chief in 1993. Hamill quickly hired four Black reporters and promoted a number of women and minorities, recalled fellow columnist Jack Newfield in his memoir, Somebody’s Gotta Tell It.

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Pete Hamill

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