Emile by Philip Cesario
In 1961, young Michael hangs out with Emile Khalid, owner of the small New York book store his father works at. Image generated with OpenAI Emile Khalid once had a fedora, a broken window, a red cat, and a black foot. Although not at the same time. French and Syrian at the root, with an intellect honed at the Ecole des Beaux-Artes in Paris, he was an enthusiastic émigré to America, erstwhile artist, alleged Communist, unabashed perambulator, bibliophile, bookshop owner, and born teacher. He was also fifty-five years my senior, and my best friend. I turned six years old in 1961, and Emile turned sixty-one, the math of his age always easy for me to calculate even as a young boy, he thoughtful enough to enter this world at the double ought. Emile lived alone, except for a red tabby with unkempt fur named Chester; the cat owned a narrow, intelligent face and he had free roam of Emile's apartment on the west side of Manhattan in an area known as Hell's Kitchen. There, Emile and...