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'''The Oldest Confession''', published by Appleton-Century-Crofts in 1958, is the first novel by the American political novelist and satirist [[Richard Condon]]. Superficially, it is what today would be called a [[Caper story|caper story]] or caper novel, a subspecies of the [[Crime novel|crime novel]]—a generally light-hearted romp in which a gang of disparate characters band together to pull off a robbery of very valuable goods from a seemly impregnable site, the acknowledged master of which was the late [[Donald E. Westlake]]. In spite of adhering to most of the informal rules of this genre, however, which include alternating comedy with scenes of dramatic tension and suspense and building to a powerful climax, Condon ends up by thumbing his nose to most of these conventions and, for the last third of the book, it is clearly tragedy that he is writing rather than comedy. | '''The Oldest Confession''', published by Appleton-Century-Crofts in 1958, is the first novel by the American political novelist and satirist [[Richard Condon]]. Superficially, it is what today would be called a [[Caper story|caper story]] or caper novel, a subspecies of the [[Crime novel|crime novel]]—a generally light-hearted romp in which a gang of disparate characters band together to pull off a robbery of very valuable goods from a seemly impregnable site, the acknowledged master of which was the late [[Donald E. Westlake]]. In spite of adhering to most of the informal rules of this genre, however, which include alternating comedy with scenes of dramatic tension and suspense and building to a powerful climax, Condon ends up by thumbing his nose to most of these conventions and, for the last third of the book, it is clearly tragedy that he is writing rather than comedy. It also becomes apparent that, throughout the book, he has far more interested in writing about the [[Human condition|human condition]] than merely recounting the story of a outrageous theft, no matter how ingenious its details. | ||
==Origins== | ==Origins== |
Revision as of 20:36, 8 January 2009
The Oldest Confession, published by Appleton-Century-Crofts in 1958, is the first novel by the American political novelist and satirist Richard Condon. Superficially, it is what today would be called a caper story or caper novel, a subspecies of the crime novel—a generally light-hearted romp in which a gang of disparate characters band together to pull off a robbery of very valuable goods from a seemly impregnable site, the acknowledged master of which was the late Donald E. Westlake. In spite of adhering to most of the informal rules of this genre, however, which include alternating comedy with scenes of dramatic tension and suspense and building to a powerful climax, Condon ends up by thumbing his nose to most of these conventions and, for the last third of the book, it is clearly tragedy that he is writing rather than comedy. It also becomes apparent that, throughout the book, he has far more interested in writing about the human condition than merely recounting the story of a outrageous theft, no matter how ingenious its details.
Origins
In 1955, Condon, the publicity agent for The Pride and the Passion, a film starring Frank Sinatra and Sofia Loren being made in Spain, was present at a scene being filmed in the ancient rectory of the Escorial, the massive palace and cathedral outside Madrid. The enormous lights needed to film the scene [1]
"revealed dozens upon dozens of great masterpieces of paintings that had not been seen centuries, hung frame touching frame—the work of Goya, Velasquez, the great Dutch masters, and the most gifted masters of the Italian Renaissance...The idea of masterpieces of Spanish painting hanging in stone castles all over Spain, high and invisible in the darkness, stayed with me and gradually formed itself into a novel called The Oldest Confession....
Back in New York, Condon began turning his initial concept into a screenplay—until his wife pointed out, correctly, that he was writing it in the past tense instead of the present, which is obligatory for screenplays, and that it should be turned into a novel. Condon followed her advice and the book was published to favorable reviews not long later.[2]
Even before it was published in April of that year, twelve film companies had initiated talks about purchasing rights to it, a very unusual amount of interest for an unpublished first novel. The forthcoming book, "Condon explained without divulging details of the plot, 'Is one of need. Half the need, love. The other half, greed.'" [3] The movie version was released in 1962 as The Happy Thieves, starring Rex Harrison and Rita Hayworth, and was dismissed by The New York Times as a "limp herring" of "the devastating first novel." [4]
The novel offers first glimpses of many of the stylistic tricks that became typical of all his later novels, among them, as the playwright George Axelrod once put it, "the madness of his similies, the lunacy of his metaphors". A selection of these from the opening pages:
The duchess was... a tribal yo-yo on a string eight hundred years long....[5]
Bourne always sat uncommonly still... a monument to his own nerves which bayed like bloodhounds at the moon of his ambition.[6]
...the giant gestures of throwing the ball from the long baskets as Van Gogh might have tried to throw off despair only to have it bound back at him from some crazy new angle.[7]
Also making a debut was Condon's delight in creating long lists of madcap and strangely juxaposed items such as:
...the dutchess [inherited] the ownership of approximately eighteen per cent of the population of Spain inclusive with farms, mines, factories, breweries, houses, forests, rocks, vineyards and holdings in eleven countries of the world including shares in a major league baseball club in North America, an ice cream company in Mexico, quite a few diamonds in South Africa, a Chinese restaurant on Rue François 1er in Paris, a television tube factory in Manila, and in geisha houses in Nagasaki and Kobe. [8]
Notes
- ↑ And Then We Moved to Rossenarra: or, The Art of Emigrating, by Richard Condon, Dial Press, New York, 1973, second printing, page 147
- ↑ ibid, page 150
- ↑ The New York Times, February 9, 1958, On Local Movie Fronts, by A. H. Weiler
- ↑ Ibid. February 5, 1962, Screen: 'Happy Thieves'; Appears on Bill with 'Season of Passion'
- ↑ The Oldest Confession, Richard Condon, paperback edition, Four Square, London, 1965, page 6
- ↑ Ibid. page 8
- ↑ Ibid. page 13
- ↑ Ibid. pages 80-81