Graham Greene may be one of the godfathers of the
modern international spy novel. But beyond
entertainment, what allows his work to still be read today is the degree to
which the personal and spiritual are tied into real-world political
situations. Prophetic beyond perhaps
even he imagined, Greene’s 1955 The Quiet
American is the story of the United States government poking its nose into
the political affairs of Vietnam—a situation already fraught with French
occupancy. Many Americans were incensed
upon the book’s publishing in the US, but Greene’s crystal ball
vision has only come into sharper focus in the time since. His portrayal of a flawed individual involved
in this circumstance only makes the affair more poignant.
The
Quiet American is the story of an ageing British
journalist, named Thomas Fowler, living in Saigon
and covering the war between the French and Vietnamese. Despite being dedicated to his job, he is an
opium user and keeps a young Vietnamese woman named Phuong as a lover
unbeknownst to his wife in Britain. In the course of reporting, Fowler runs
across a young American living in the city.
An upper-class intellectual, Pyle seems innocent enough on the surface,
but mysterious events soon begin taking shape, and when Pyle lays claim to
Phuong, Fowler decides to use his credentials to dig deeper into the deepening
political tension surrounding the man.
What he finds does not make the decisions that come any easier.
Though the novel operates in the mode of international
thriller, Greene keeps the story at a personal level. Fowler’s life is not easy, and his personal choices
don’t help. The uncertainty of having a job,
drug use, adultery, and the chaos of war hanging on the fringes serve to weight
his shoulders more than the average man’s—even basking in his own dark mood at
times. The novel’s conclusion nothing of
the happy-go-lucky type, Fowler does find a measure of peace, but not without
the addition of new problems. Greene’s
ability to mix this personal with the political has rightfully kept the novel’s
head above water in the half-century that has passed since its publishing and
is ultimately the reason its political commentary impresses both the reader’s
heart and brain.
Greene’s portrayal of Pyle is not exactly the
aristocratic, Harvard-educated person the average American envisions. His motives set at a fundamentally
ideological level, the reasons behind his existence in Vietnam
exemplify the idea of morally gray.
Fowler himself not the most virtuous of people, the two characters’
storylines intertwine and evolve in wholly realistic fashion. Knowing their exploits have not been
idealized to manipulate reader’s emotions, the reading thus becomes a more
engaging experience.
In the end, The
Quiet American, though short, has everything a good novel should. Realistic main characters motivated by an
equally realistic plot (especially given the history that has transpired
since), all in lean, focused, well-written prose. That Greene is able to effectively mix
personal values with commentary upon the political motivation of an ambitious
government pushes the novel toward being one of the best of the 20th
century. It is Vietnam War discussion
before there was a war, and commentary on every major war in the Middle East that has occurred since, and worth a read.
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