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- <text id=90TT3180>
- <title>
- Nov. 26, 1990: The Man With The Golden Ear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Nov. 26, 1990 The Junk Mail Explosion!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 87
- The Man with the Golden Ear
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>George V. Higgins thrives on the precept that talk is plot
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW
- </p>
- <p> One fine day in 1972, an assistant U.S. Attorney for the
- District of Massachusetts drove to the city dump in Rockland,
- Mass., took 14 bulky typescripts out of his car and heaved them
- as far as he could into the trash. "I waited till the bulldozer
- came by and buried them," said George V. Higgins recently,
- recalling the scene with satisfaction. "And then I left."
- </p>
- <p> So far, Higgins' first 14 novels have not risen from
- Rockland's slime to shame their creator. Most of them, he says,
- had shamed him already, by collecting thumbprints and rejection
- letters from virtually all the reputable publishing houses in
- New York City and Boston. What gave him the courage to deep-six
- such a large shelf of certifiably lame literature, however, was
- an acceptance. The Friends of Eddie Coyle, a gritty, amiably
- cynical tale about barroom lowlifes and courthouse small-timers
- in Massachusetts, had been bought by Knopf. Higgins prepared,
- at last, for overnight success. What followed showed why novel
- writing is a chancy trade. Reviewers loved the novel. But Eddie
- Coyle never moved higher than fifth on the New York Times
- best-seller list, and in 12 months sold fewer than 25,000
- copies. Failure? No, success; most first novels aren't reviewed
- at all, and most well-reviewed novels don't sell 25,000
- hard-cover copies.
- </p>
- <p> Higgins, 51, grouched cheerfully about such matters over an
- easeful lunch in what must no longer be called the men's bar
- at Locke-Ober, hard by the Boston Common. Books, as distinct
- from best sellers, just aren't thought important, he says. He
- notes with disgust that even in the most literate city in North
- America (that's Boston), the leading paper (the Globe, though
- he deplores its preachiness) barely bothers to scrape together
- a Sunday book-review section. And justifies this lapse (says
- Higgins, a onetime Globe columnist) because it doesn't get
- enough book ads. "Does the Globe's sports section get enough
- ads for baseball gloves and hockey sticks? No. That's where you
- see ads for snow tires. Don't book readers use snow tires?"
- </p>
- <p> Higgins did well enough in the good-writing dodge, however--a fair-sized following watches the bookstores and grabs
- whatever he writes on the first bounce--to be able to quit
- his assistant U.S. Attorney post in 1973, and eventually to
- leave off the practice of law altogether. That year he
- published a superb second novel (16th, counting those in the
- Rockland dump) called The Digger's Game. If somebody isn't
- teaching this small marvel in writing classes, then U.S.
- education is in worse shape than we have been told. Probably
- not, though; there is an indictable villainy or two in the
- plot, and Higgins is pigeonholed, wrongly but irretrievably,
- as a crime novelist.
- </p>
- <p> Higgins has since written a dozen more novels or so, and
- reviewers have continued to praise him, especially for his
- dialogue--though with diminishing patience, as if having an
- uncanny ear and using it were a bit too easy. This drives the
- author a little crazy when he thinks about it, and he thumps
- down a precept that could be carved in stone: "Dialogue is
- character is plot." In a shrewd book published last June, On
- Writing, he approvingly notes that John O'Hara, a novelist he
- admires above almost all others, would tell a whole chapter with
- dialogue--a husband and wife, for instance, punching with
- their words, counterpunching, drawing blood. Similarly,
- novelist Higgins will let a conversation run on till Tuesday
- after next.
- </p>
- <p> Conversations do that in Victories (Henry Holt; 298 pages;
- $19.95), Higgins' maliciously funny new novel, set not in his
- usual Massachusetts courthouse corridors but in hardscrabble
- Vermont farm country. A slippery statehouse politician named
- Ed Cobb tries to persuade Henry Briggs, a retired major-league
- relief pitcher, to run for Congress on the Democratic ticket.
- Briggs, a born-and-bred Vermonter and no fool, knows this is
- like taking a high dive into a damp dishrag. But they talk. And
- talk. And Briggs and his wife Lillian argue. And argue. She's
- an earache. When he was in baseball he played around, and now
- she's getting back at him. Talk is plot is literature.
- </p>
- <p> How about that talk, though? Higgins, who spent three weeks
- a summer in Vermont as a boy, hating every minute, flags a
- Vermont accent like this: "You're working for another man,
- you're liable, put things off. Not go through the barn today,
- make sure everything's all right." Which is the same way he
- signals a Massachusetts tough-guy accent, with that glottal
- comma in place of the missing "to." Is this realistic? Of
- course not. Does it work? Sure, because it's only a signal, to
- tell the reader's ear to supply an accent.
- </p>
- <p> What appeals so strongly about Higgins' fiction may be that
- he lets the reader overhear men sizing up other men, judging
- them, often not gently. (Mostly men, yes; his women characters
- tend to be not much more than complications in the lives of
- their menfolk.) In The Progress of the Seasons, a 1989 book
- nominally about Boston's accursed Red Sox baseball team but
- mostly about the author's family, Higgins offers a shimmering
- truth: Irish Catholic males can't talk to one another about
- important personal matters. (Scandinavian Protestant males
- can't either, for the record.) So he, his father and his
- grandfather talked about baseball with deep seriousness, as if
- it mattered, thus showing their love.
- </p>
- <p> Higgins' characters jaw endlessly about politics, the law
- and sports, showing but never speaking of love, depression,
- disdain, fear. He says he'll never run out of stories, though
- he keeps his bar-association membership current, just in case.
- He loves what he does, and has never collided with writer's
- block. Advice to young novelists? Nothing simpler: "You're a
- brick layer, you lay bricks."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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