In 1959, Larner began a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at
UC Berkeley, but finding himself unsuited for academic life he left graduate school in his first year and came to New York City at 22. He stayed there throughout the 1960s, writing five books in that period. In 1962, Larner was assigned by
Dissent magazine to cover the teachers' strike, and spent several months going to elementary school classes in
Harlem. His long account of what he discovered was widely anthologized, having come to the attention of
Michael Harrington, author of
The Other America: Poverty in the United States, which inspired
John F. Kennedy and
Robert F. Kennedy. Larner's first published piece was a critique of
J. D. Salinger, published in
Partisan Review in 1961. Also in that year he journeyed south to cover the
lunch-counter sit-in strikes organized at black universities, and wrote several pieces for
The New Leader and
Dissent. In 1963, Larner edited a taped collection of interviews with
heroin addicts at the
Henry Street Settlement in New York. The harrowing stories told in these interviews became the basis of one of the first books from tape:
The Addict in the Street, which remained in print for 20 years.
Grove Press celebrated its publication in early 1965 with a party for Larner and
William S. Burroughs, where
Norman Mailer challenged Larner to a fight. ==First novel,
Drive, He Said; writing prizes==