The Two Faces of January
First edition | |
Author | Patricia Highsmith |
---|---|
Cover artist | Polly Cameron |
Country | United States |
Language | English language |
Genre | Psychological thriller |
Publisher | Doubleday |
Publication date | 1964 |
OCLC | 16923778 |
813/.54 19 | |
LC Class | PS3558.I366 T8 1988 |
The Two Faces of January (1964) is a psychological thriller novel by Patricia Highsmith. Its title alludes to the two faces of the Roman god Janus, after whom the month of January was named. Biographer Andrew Wilson, in his 2003 publication Beautiful Shadow: A Life of Patricia Highsmith claims the title is 'appropriate for the janus-faced, flux-like nature of her protagonists'.[1]
Plot outline
Chester MacFarland is an alcoholic con artist traveling in Greece with his young wife, Colette. McFarland is wanted by the police back in the U.S. for running a Ponzi scheme. In Athens, a Greek policeman questions McFarland, whom he accidentally kills during a struggle in his hotel room. A recent acquaintance, a young American law graduate and poet named Rydal Keener, decides to help them, in part because McFarland reminds him of his recently deceased father, from whom he was estranged. He helps McFarland and Colette hide the body and leave Athens under false passports procured by his friend Niko, a small-time hoodlum.
Bound together for the foreseeable future, the trio take a flight to Crete and install themselves there in a hotel under assumed names. Colette, who seems to have a record of infidelity, flirts with a smitten Keener in front of McFarland, whose jealousy eventually gets the better of him. On a rainy morning, while they visit the palace of Knossos, MacFarland tries to kill Keener by throwing a pithoi at him from above, but accidentally kills Colette instead. Both MacFarland and Keener separately flee the scene of the crime undetected and take the same boat back to Athens, now more dependent on each other than ever.
Back in Athens, MacFarland is interviewed by the police, and states that Keener murdered Colette. At the same time, he hires a contract killer to get rid of Keener once and for all. He is unaware that the "hitman", whom he pays in advance, is in fact a florist whom Keener paid to set him up. Keener goes into hiding from the police, while MacFarland procures another false passport and books a flight to Paris.
In Paris, MacFarland learns from his accomplices in the Ponzi scheme that his enterprises there are no longer lucrative and that the U.S. authorities may be looking for him. Nevertheless, he believes that going back to the States and starting afresh under a new name is the only option left to him. Keener, whom McFarland had assumed was dead, suddenly reappears and blackmails him. Unbeknownst to McFarland, Keener is in fact working with the police to get him to confess to Colette's murder. Leaving behind all his possessions except his cash stuffed into his pockets, McFarland travels by taxi to Lyon and then on to Marseille, where he intends to get a boat or a plane to America. While waiting for the boat, however, he gets drunk in a bar and is mugged, robbed of everything except his overcoat. In his stupor, he is arrested and identified by the French police.
While in police custody, MacFarland gets hold of a guard's pistol, fires at him, and is shot in turn. As he dies, he takes responsibility for Colette's death, exonerating Keener. After the police clear Keener of any wrongdoing, he promises to go to McFarland's funeral service out of gratitude.
Reviews
The publishers quote the following positive reviews:
- "Shifts of ground stand metaphor for shifts in relationship; psychology is beautifully interleaved with a gritty genius loci." - Library Journal
- "An offbeat, provocative and absorbing suspense novel." - Anthony Boucher, New York Times
Adaptations
A film adaptation was released in 2014. It was written and directed by Hossein Amini, and starred Viggo Mortensen, Kirsten Dunst and Oscar Isaac.
Amini credited the novel with sparking his interest in Patricia Highsmith. He writes, "What I love about Highsmith is the way that she puts us in the shoes of traditionally 'unlikeable' characters, often criminals, and then makes us not only understand their motivations but recognize something of ourselves in them. [...] It was this type of connection that drew me to Chester MacFarland, [...] a jealous, alcoholic conman who is nevertheless a deeply tragic figure. His journey of murder, flight and redemption made him an unforgettable character for me and one of the main reasons I wanted to turn the novel into a film."[2]
External references
References
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