COUNTDOWN: Mid-20th Century North American Crime
BOOK 81 (of 250)
This award winning work (Crime Writers Association Best Foreign Novel) isn't among Highsmith's most famous works. But it's good, solid Highsmith: the style is unmistakably the author's. Anthony Boucher, from the New York Times, says this is "An offbeat, provocative and absorbing suspense novel." Carol Ames of the Los Angeles Times says this work "goes far beyond the bounds of the 'mystery'...It is time she reached a wider audience." It doesn't surprise me if Ames wrote that in 1964 when this novel was published: after all Highsmith zoomed to fame only after the Matt Damon/Jude Law/Gwyneth Paltrow/Cate Blanchett/Phillip Seymour Hoffman 1999 film version of "Talented Mr. Ripley" directed by Anthony Minghella. (THAT's what I call a stupendous film pedigree.) If ONLY Hitchcock had got Highsmith's "Strangers on a Train" right in the first place in the 1950s, every book she wrote would have been filmed. Probably several times.
HOOK = 3 stars: The opening lines are >>>>
"At half past three of a morning in early January, Chester MacFarland was awakened in his berth on the San Gimignano by an alarming sound of scraping. He sat up and saw through the porthole a brightly lighted wall of orangey-red colour...There were scribblings...W. Mussolini...The alarm clock went off...'Darling?-What's going on?'Colette asked. <<<<<
If you've read Highsmith, you know that 'What's going on' is going to go on in a ruin (judging by the cover of the Atlantic Monthly Press reprint with a great cover designed by Andrew Ellis and Marc Tauss.) and yes, someone is watching someone who doesn't really want to be watched, and who is possibly hiding in the shadows of the cover design? Or is that 'hiding person' already dead?
PACE = 2: Highsmith here trades a page-turner for atmosphere and this is absolutely worth a slow, vacation-type luxury read.
PLOT = 4: There is, very early, a murder out of nowhere. Chester isn't who you think he is (do we ever find out, really?), young Colette tries her best to understand her relatively new husband (she has no idea who she has married), and then there is a 2nd murder. Then twists, and double crosses, and purchased passports and more...
CAST = 3: Chester has a lot of secrets. Colette learns them slowly. A new friend, Rydal Keener, enters the relationship and it's like Tom Ripley has wondered into a different book. That's fine (there are five Ripley books, I've read 3 which I think are good to great) as this Ripley-type character is one for the ages: he'll be discussed later in my countdown. Here, Rydal remembers "Proust's remark, that people do not grow emotionally." That's a telling remark, certainly. The characters are good here but they are overshadowed by the magnificent...
ATMOSPHERE = 5 BIG STARS: If you feel you need a mini-vacation, start right here. Highsmith takes us on a beautiful tour of Greek Islands. On one island, Rydal visits the Cafe Brasil and goes by "a mirror some ten feet long on the wall, crossed a small, meaningless foyer...On the next floor, a tall and somewhat angular woman in tweeds, not a bit masculine but flat and sexless as something out of a 1920 British fashion drawing (yea, pure Highsmith)...returned Rydal's gaze with calm, greenish eyes...but that was another game Rydal played, and the Hotel Melchior Condylis was just the place to play it. The game might be called Adventure." We're on page 11, Rydal's adventure is about to begin. "There was an East Indian couple now, and an elderly French couple. There was a young Russian student whom Rydal had tried chatting with in Russian...Last month there had been an Eskimo travelling with an American oceanographer...Then Rydal came to a stop. The man talking to Niko looked remarkably like his father..." Back to Chester and Colette: "In their six days in Athens [they] had gone twice to the Acropolis with their Guide Bleu, had taken a bus to see the sunset at Sounion and Bryon's famous signature in one of the marble columns of the ruined temple there...The Peloponnesus was next, with Mycenae and Corinth...Then back by plane to Paris for another week or so before going home." But they have no home, really, they don't get back to Paris as planned, and set piece after set piece will read better than any travel guide you'll find.
SUMMARY: 3.4. The authentic tours, ruins, mazes, terraces, meals, hotels, views, etc., are the star of this novel. But, yes, there is crime. LOTS of crime. At least 2 murders. What a mess after a coincidental meeting of...well, read and enjoy at leisure!