"Midnights is both a comedy of errors and an affectionate portrait
of small-town police, those beleaguered souls charged with the task of
keeping their neighbors in line....A reminder that those assigned to
protect are often vulnerable and quietly heroic."--Time
Funny, touching, revealing, here is the view from a rookie cop's patrol
car, during midnight shifts, in a (mostly) peaceful town. With a rich
cast of characters, this is a classic memoir of the fear, surprises,
excitement, embarrassment that comes with a protecting and serving a
small community.
"When I was twenty-three years old, five months out of college, with a
degree in music, and without any idea of what to do with myself, I took
a job as a policeman in Wellfleet, Massachusetts," so writes Alec
Wilkinson. "Music, huh?" the police chief said during the job interview.
"That'll be a big help." Wilkinson's main qualification was familiarity
with the town of 2,000 people from summers there growing up. Committing
himself to a year wearing a uniform and carrying a gun, and with no
training, Wilkinson was sent out to keep the peace, hoping nothing would
happen.
There are high-speed chases and stopping drunk drivers, one of whom
tries to set Wilkinson's hair on fire. There are domestic squabbles.
"The first six months were murder for me," Wilkinson's partner confides
on his first night. "After that, when I found out the people I thought
were my friends weren't really my friends, I felt better off." There is
an attempted bank robbery. The teller convinces the robber that his haul
($300) is too much to carry around in cash. The robber is still
listening to investment options when the police arrive.
Throughout there are conversations with his eight fellow officers who
Wilkinson comes to respect and admire. "Nobody ever calls you when
they're behaving themselves," one admits. "As a rule, you always get
called when people are at their worst. It's sad. It depresses me." The
job is often thankless. "Right now I work on the police force," another
officer says, "my wife stamps cans in the supermarket, and she makes
more money than I do."
This is experiential journalism at its most poignant and
entertaining--and it launched the career of Alec Wilkinson: writer,
interviewer, essayist, and author. This is for any reader looking for
insight into the real lives of police officers, outside of large cities,
across America. It is also for anyone looking for a marvelously engaging
read.
Midnights is part of Godine's Nonpareil series: celebrating the
joy of discovery with books bound to be classics.