"She had stopped right there at twenty-four. She had been abruptly halted. And the years went by and she was still twenty-four. Now you were thirty-two instead of twenty-seven, and you would become forty-two and fifty-two, while she stayed back there, frozen in that explosive moment of time, still twenty-four, forever slim and clean-limbed, forever three months pregnant."
"She sat beside her husband and thought of marriage. You did not think of the big things, the epochal, the stirring. You thought instead of the trivia of marriage. The ludicrous. The absurd. Your mind was cluttered with little things."
"It was funny about age. Funny how easily you could forget that you were old, be trapped into thinking a young man’s thoughts. He remembered how it was at forty, when you could think that if you were lucky and healthy, there could be just as much life ahead of you as there was behind you. But when you were over sixty, you knew the biggest part was behind you. And you didn’t know if you had one more year or ten. Or even fifteen. Sometimes fifteen seemed like a lot of years. Other times it seemed like a meager unfair amount, like you were being cheated. That was when you looked at the young ones and felt stinging envy and thought how if you had their life, you wouldn’t waste a moment of it. Not a single second."
As a young man in college, I remember seeing my Great Uncle reading John D. MacDonald, and wondered, at the time, what the attraction was. Now I am wondering where has Mr. MacDonald been my whole life. At the beginning of this book, Dean Koontz provided a forward, and he said the following about the author's character development:
"Of all his manifest strengths as a writer, however, I am most in awe of his ability to create characters who are as real as anyone I’ve met in life. John D sometimes paused in the headlong rush of his story to spin out pages of background on a character. At first when this happened, I grumbled about getting on with the story. But I soon discovered that he could make the character so fascinating that when the story began to race forward again, I wanted it to slow down so I could learn more about this person who so intrigued and/or delighted me. There have been many good suspense novelists in recent decades, but in my experience, none has produced characters with as much humanity and truth as those in MacDonald’s work."
Now I could have born a similar opinion, but I see no reason when I am in complete agreement of Mr. Koontz's analysis. As demonstrated with the MacDonald quotes above, which are the partial personality probes of three different characters in Murder in the Wind, he possessed the master's hand in developing unique and dramatically different individuals. Consequently, I became so enthralled in the character development in Murder in the Wind that I almost forgot about the story, and what a story it is!
In many ways, Murder in the Wind brought back memories of Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Bridge of San Luis Rey. It is a novel of unrelated characters who are brought together in a pivotal occurrence, but unlike Wilder's masterpiece, the occurrence provides the characters with opportunities to make choices, whether good or bad, to gain an awareness of self, and to bare their true identity. As MacDonald succeeds in analyzing each character, the reader can't help but reflect on his or her own possible reactions in a situation such as described in this amazing novel.
Some, who are MacDonald aficionados may say that Murder in the Wind, was not one of his best because it wasn't a Travis McGee standard, but for me who is a pioneer of this author, it has opened up a new writer that I may delve into and enjoy thoroughly. And for those who have read all of his works, I would imagine you are jealous that you can't experience my opportunity for exploration. I look forward to reading many more of his novels.