Metaphors and similes The novel offers many fine examples of the traits and stylistic tricks that were typical of all of Condon's works, among them, as the playwright
George Axelrod once put it, "the sheer gusto of the prose, the madness of his similies, the lunacy of his metaphors". A selection, taken almost at random: from
Mile High: • "His anger was mounting like the white smoke of the papal election signal"—page 34 • "Her dank black hair looked as though it had been arranged with an egg beater"—page 36 • "She paddled on her back in a limpid pool of wistful fantasies"—page 37 • "He was seventy-nine years old and might have lived to be ninety had he remembered Aaron Burr and not lost his temper just for the sake of slugging a horse. Just as Burr might have been President had he not lost his temper and shot Alexander Hamilton"—page 44
Food As one Condon book succeeded another, he more and more described elaborate food preparations, generally from French cuisine, and gave long, detailed menus for what his characters ate at various meals. In
Mile High, the abstemious Paddy West has a businessman's lunch at the famous
Delmonico's at which he drinks
selzer water but eats dines on "caviar, tortue verte au sherry, filets de sole à la Nantua, suprême de volaille aux truffes fraîches, haricot verts à la creme, pommes de terre à la parisienne, parfait de fois gras à la gelée de porto, asperges vertes, bombe Montmorency and friandises."—page 47
Real-life names Condon enjoyed peppering his books with generally brief allusions to real-life acquaintances. In
Mile High, there is the first mention of the novelist Robert Keifetz, as "the Keifetz Prize," on page 263, first mention of Keifetz. Also appearing is another of Condon's regulars, Dr. Abraham Weiler, page 262. In real life Weiler was a film critic for the
New York Times. F. Marx Heller of the law firm Pick, Heller & O'Connell appears on page 61 and plays a minor role for a few chapters. F.M. Heller, or some variation thereof, is mentioned in all 26 of Condon's novels. The real-life Heller was a
television director in New York City who eventually moved to a house on Rockrimmon Road in
Stamford, Connecticut. "I flew in straight from an all-night party at Rockrimmon," says a character in
Mile High on page 313, the first of what would become recurring mentions of Rockrimmon in future Condon books. ==Possible errors==