George V. Higgins is one of my favorite authors. Back in the 1990s, I read A Choice of Enemies and thought that it might have been Higgins’ best book. No one tells a story like Higgins. He uses razor-sharp, cynical dialogue to reveal his characters.
In April, I came across a first edition of A Choice of Enemies (including dust jacket) at a thrift store. I bought the book and got around to rereading it @ the end of July.
The book loosely centers around Bernie Morgan, the speaker of the house in the Massachusetts legislature. Higgins has various characters describe Morgan (and each other). This is one of the hallmarks of Higgins’ writing. Each character has a different impression – and, more importantly, a different interest in the success or failure of Morgan’s political career.
The characters interact in complex ways. There are interconnections between many of them and the reader admires Higgins’ skill @ weaving an intricate plot. At the same time, sometimes it feels as though a scorecard is necessary to keep up with “who’s who.”
I heard Higgins say once that authors shouldn’t “take sides” with their characters. Few writers do a better job creating an ambiguous world than does Higgins. There are no “good guys” or “bad guys” in his novels – just varying shades of gray. And that’s one of the things that I like best about Higgins’ novels.
Morgan is a likable rogue. Higgins makes it clear that Morgan’s time at that top is almost at an end. There are many who want to take him down – generally so that they can advance their own interests.
Morgan’s “counselor,” Francis X. Costello is also central to the story. If Morgan is the front man, Costello is power behind the scenes. Higgins spends a lot of time on Costello. Another character describes Costello:
“A Frank Costello is a sort of a latter-day privateer, preying on the sea-lanes of commerce for his own plunder. Generally he’s pretty careful to avoid attracting too much attention to himself. Doesn’t like it, as a matter of fact. Has a tendency to lie low, like Bre’r Fox. He don’t say nuffin’. When he wants something done overseas, he has somebody overseas who will do it. When he wants something done in New York, somebody in Manhattan will respond immediately. He has somebody in Washington, somebody in L.S., and he of course reciprocates and is their somebody in Boston” (p. 138).
Toward the end of the book, you can see the pieces start to come together. Given that no person in A Choice of Enemies is “pure,” it comes as no surprise that a certain amount of betrayal is involved in the conclusion. Despite – or because of – the characters’ flaws, the reader cannot wait to see what’s going to happen. I stayed up late a couple of nights because I didn't want to stop reading.
A Choice of Enemies is long at 377 pages. But I think that the investment is worth it.