Only one book
really stood out for me in March. That’s not because it was a slow or fallow
month for reading, but when the last two books read in February were The Given Day and All the Pieces Fit (Jonathan Abrams’s outstanding oral history of The Wire) and the first book read in
March is Joseph Wambaugh’s The Choirboys,
let’s just say any other books in the immediate future have some unfairly high
expectations to overcome. (I did read one pre-release book that merits
attention, but I’ll save that until closer to the release date.)
Joe Wambaugh
pretty much invented the realistic cop-in-the-street thriller with The New Centurions and The Blue Knight, but The Choirboys is the Catch-22 of police fiction. Bawdy,
crude, terrifying, heartbreaking, surprising, and then some, it’s as close to a
perfect book as I can imagine.
Since The Choirboys is the only book I called
out this month, let’s dig a little deeper into why. The most obvious thing
about any Wambaugh novel are the anecdotes that make up the bulk of the
narrative. Here they don’t necessarily seem to be going anywhere, character
sketches of weird and frightening things that happen to a dozen cops and how
those cops relate to the events, and each other, through that’s called “choir
practice,” night-long alcohol- and sex-fueled parties held in MacArthur Park.
Wambaugh tells stories few others can, fourteen years an LA cop who gained
enough cred with other cops that they still line up to tell him stories he can
use in books over forty years later.
What keeps
Wambaugh apart from dozens of other cops who fictionalize their stories is his
talent for writing, as well as for constructing the books. Two things stick out
to me, in addition to the wonderful and nuanced characterizations and laugh-out-loud
dialog: structure and foreshadowing.
The structure
is something to behold, the work of an author who trusts his audience to
remember what he’s told them as much as he trusts his ability to tell them
something memorable. The first several chapters deal with the bosses,
lieutenants and above, and what ignorant assholes they are. Those who pay
attention have likely figured out kinds of people join police departments. Some
are there to be cops. They may want to remain on patrol their entire careers or
move up to detective, but what they care about is police work.
Then there are
the bosses, those who immediately jump into the political aspect of the
profession. Wambaugh makes no secret where his sympathies lie, which is why he
had to leave the force after the book came out. The bosses here make The Wire’s Ervin Burrell look like
Dwight Eisenhower by comparison. Having established these incompetent
womanizing nincompoops as those in charge, Wambaugh leaves them alone so he can
tell you about those they command, dropping in the bosses’ names and actions as
needed, trusting you to remember them. It’s never a problem.
I’m not a fan
of foreshadowing, which in contemporary thrillers consists of little more than
ending chapters with, “I had no way to know I’d never see her again alive,” or,
“The next time I’d see him I’d have a gun pointed at his head.” Wambaugh is
much more subtle and effective. Establishing in Chapter 4 that the Wilshire
District officers “chose MacArthur Park as the choir practice site because it
was in Rampart Station’s territory. They believed that one does not shit in
one’s own nest,” he’s free to allow the cops less discretion that they might
have received here they might be more easily recognized.
The first
reference to what is the point of the whole book is at the beginning of Chapter
6: “Willie Wright was also destined to become a police celebrity. It happened
four months before the choir practice killing.” Chapter 7 opens with, “A choir
practice was certainly in order and was called for by Francis Tanaguchi… It was
three months before the killing in Macarthur Park.” After that the amount of
time between the chapter in question and the killing is always less, but not
every chapter begins so. Wambaugh has accomplished the true goal of proper foreshadowing:
leaving the idea in the back of your mind without telling you any more of what
is to happen than he has to.
Maybe when I
retire I’ll have time to take apart The
Choirboys and give it its due. It’s not the kind of book one unpacks
lightly, regardless of how funny it is, and I’ve never read a funnier book. If
you haven’t read it, do. If you have, it’s worth another look. And another. And
another…
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