Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Forgotten Books: The Crimes of Jordan Wise, by Bill Pronzini.

Forgotten Books: The Crimes of Jordan Wise, by Bill Pronzini.

While this fine novel was published in 2006, I think it's appropriate here because while it got its due critically it deserved a much larger audience.

Actuary Jordan Wise tells a joke on himself a third of the way through the novel: (paraphrase) an actuary is somebody who doesn’t have the personality to be an accountant.

If you watch many true crime shows, you see a lot of Jordan Wises. People who fall into crime through circumstance rather than those who go looking for it.

Jordan becomes a criminal only after meeting Annalise, a troubled and very attractive young woman who needs two things badly – sex and money. But in order to get the sex on a regular basis, Jordan must first provide the money. He embezzles a half million dollars and flees with Annalise to the Virgin Islands. In this first part of the novel, there’s nice James M. Cainian detail about how Jordan comes alive for the first time in his life. Some of this is due, whether he admits it or not, to the danger of committing a serious crime. But most of it is due to Annalise and his profound sexual awakening.

The central section of the book reminds me of one of Maugham’s great South Seas tales – lust, betrayal, shame played out against vast natural beauty and a native society that, thanks to an old sea man named Bone, that Jordan comes to see value in – even if Annalise, her head filled with dreams of Paris and glamor, does not. Old Maugham got one thing right for sure – as Pronzini demonstrates here – a good share of humanity, wherever you find them, are both treacherous and more than slightly insane.

There are amazing sections of writing about sea craft and sailing that remind me not of old Travis McGee but of the profoundly more troubled and desperate men of Charles Williams who find purity and peace only in the great and epic truths of the sea. That they may be as crazed and treacherous as everybdy else does not seem to bother them unduly.

There are also amazing sections (almost diaristic sections) where Jordan tells of us his fears and desires, his failings and his dreams. In places he deals vididly, painfully with his secret terror of not being enough of a man in any sense to hold Annalise.

The publisher calls this a novel and so it is. Pronzini brings great original width and breadth to the telling of this dark adventure that is both physical and spiritual. He has never written a better novel, the prose here literary in the best sense, lucid and compelling, fit for both action and introspection.

You can’t read a page of this without seeing it in movie terms. The psychologically violent love story played out against a variety of contemporary settings gives the narrative great scope. And in Jordan Wise and Annalise he has created two timeless people. This story could have been set in ancient Egypt or Harlem in 1903 or an LA roller skating disco in 1981. As Faulkner said, neither the human heart nor the human dilemma ever changes.
posted by Ed Gorman @ 1:06 PM 0 comments links to this post

4 comments:

Bill Pronzini said...

Thanks so much, Ed. I agree that JORDAN WISE is my best novel, maybe the best novel of which I'm capable. Gratifying to have it praised by a writer of your caliber.

Todd Mason said...

Well, I guess it's past time to place my overdue order now...along with Malzberg and Resnick's new book, and go ahead and pre-order that new novel by that Gorman fellow (say, btw, has there been a delay in the publication date of the annual? Amazon seemed to think so, but they think so very many things).

Ben Boulden said...

I completely agree. JORDAN WISE is a masterpiece. It is fiction at the highest level.

Anonymous said...

Not only my favorite Pronzini novel, but one of my all-time favorite novels. As Ben said, truly a noir masterpiece.

~Ron C.