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The Partners

von Louis Auchincloss

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723369,132 (3.8)8
A New York Times-bestselling novel of love, money, and ambition among the employees of a white-shoe law firm. From a renowned chronicler of American high society, this is a novel set in the small but distinguished New York law firm of Shepard, Putney & Cox in the early 1970s.   The son of a rich mother and a socially ambitious father, Beekman "Beeky" Ehninger makes a successful career for himself in the narrow upper echelons of his profession. For years, he has quietly guided his firm through numerous periods of transition--not to mention marital strife, forgery, and fraud. But as times have changed, Beeky and his colleagues must decide whether to join forces with a new and different breed--tough, but undeniably successful.   The Partners is a masterful characterization of moral men navigating an amoral world, of lawyers, their families, and the rich and powerful people they serve.   "Vintage Auchincloss--sensitive, ironic, sympathetic, affecting. Auchincloss is particularly good with the interior reality of seemingly minor conflicts; he also shows, over and over again, that seemingly large and dramatic conflicts are often not the important ones." --New York magazine… (mehr)
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This is the second Auchincloss novel I’ve read. Diary of a Yuppie (1986) read like a hyper-polished Henry Jamesian version of American Psycho (1991). The Partners (1974) proceeds like a season of Mad Men (AMC, 2007—2015), but taking place in a white shoe corporate law firm on Wall Street instead of Don Draper’s Sixties ad firm.

At Shepard, Putney and Cox, Beekman “Beeky” Ehninger, a senior partner, navigates the crucible of corporate law, a challenging marriage, and upholding his personal moral code. The novel moves forward stately and staid, but never boring, each chapter like a long short story. Beeky is less the main character than the lodestar around which other minor bodies revolve. Administrative reorganization, merger threats, and ethical lapses harry the firm across stories tragical, comical, comical-tragical, and so forth. After setting the scene in the Nixon-era Big Apple, Auchincloss sets several chapters decades earlier when Beeky was a green college graduate. A couple chapters recount his early career as an aspiring clerk in the firm of Shepard & Howland. As with Diary of a Yuppie, Auchincloss pilots the course between the interconnected world of high finance and high society, each populated by peacocks and thugs.

Throughout his career Auchincloss has been compared to The Master, Henry James. Don’t let that praise intimidate you, because Auchincloss writes in a style at once smoothly polished yet highly accessible. His high society types will make pepper their dinner conversations with references to personalities of Imperial Rome or seventeenth century Spanish playwrights. This might have proven a high wall to scale, but today there’s Google. An infinite encyclopedia at your fingertips.

That said, it would be churlish to write an entire review on an Auchincloss novel without a sample of the writing. While the later writings of Henry James are baroque labyrinths of indirection, Auchincloss can capture a character in a few short lines. In the first chapter, “A Kingly Crown,” Beeky seeks to reorganize Shepard, Putney and Cox, recruiting help among the senior partners. In order to create a firm within a firm, he must convince Dan Purdy. Describing Purdy becomes an exercise in the comical grotesque, more Addams Family than Henry Adams:

"Dan Purdy, as Mrs. Bing said, looked like a monk. Austerity seemed to emanate from his tall spare frame like dry air from a desert. He was not, perhaps, a bad-looking man: his regular features and long, strong face might have been almost attractive but for an air of juicelessness that hung about him, a hard-baked clay quality that made one see his short stiff curly hair as a tonsure. Dan moved rapidly, abruptly, awkwardly. His voice was harsh and loud, and his laugh sounded like gravel on tin. But there was a tough humorousness in his cynicism, a trenchancy to his observations, a naked strength in his observations and actions that made him a leader, if not of men, at least of cliques."

If you are looking for a short novel – the hardcover barely cracks 250 pages – to scratch that Mad Men itch, The Partners is the novel for you. Auchincloss simultaneously reveals himself as a master of modern prose and in his ability to capture the zeitgeist of the era. In this case, through the character of Beeky and the partners of Shepard, Putney and Cox, the post-Sixties anxieties and frustrations at the fading morality of an older era. Memories of robber barons clash with a nascent feminism and concerns for pollution. The Partners is less about aging gracefully than the tragicomic attempts to pull off such a feat.

https://driftlessareareview.com/2020/04/12/espresso-shots-the-partners-by-louis-... ( )
1 abstimmen kswolff | Apr 12, 2020 |
Loved this book! Interesting stories revolving around a major NYC law firm and the in-house politics and family struggles the various members of the firm experience. All stories are separate, but never stray far from the behind-the-scenes conscience of the firm, Beeky. A fascinating glimpse of life in a major firm, the social responsibilities expected, the stress on families of partners and the moral dilemmas that continually barrage those doing the work. I have always liked the Auchincloss style and personal insight he has from his own life spent in a major law firm. Great detailed descriptions of these characters and what makes them tick, think, and react to what is going on around them, as well as the history that brought them to the present. And with that background context, we see they are almost powerless to avoid the ultimate conclusion of each story, something that would not have been obvious at all otherwise. Still a bunch more of Auchincloss to go and i cannot wait! ( )
  jeffome | Aug 2, 2011 |
For such an apparently conservative writer, Auchincloss is actually a closeted radical, one of the very rare writers who takes seriously the "business lives" of his characters: that part of life that, in truth, occupies the majority of the time, interest and energy of the average middle-class American; although, of course, the middle class is hardly the focus of Auchincloss' careful gaze, unless one considers Wall Street lawyers members of the middle class. In this era of billionaire investment bankers, perhaps that's true. But 35 years ago, these characters would certainly have been considered denizens of the "great world". What I like best about Auchincloss is the special tone (or perhaps point of view) he employs in his fictions. There is always a certain coolness behind the avuncular pose: a detachment that leaves you pleasurably uncertain as to the precise degree of irony being employed. What, for instance, is the valence of the word "possibly" in the following sentence: "In his smiling, wheedling, sourly breathing manner, as he moved closer to his interlocutor than the latter could possibly want, he managed to imply, with his hoarse, gasping, almost noiseless laugh, that he was mocking himself quite as much as his listener." However, there are signs of haste and inattention, not surprisingly; considering Auchincloss was engaged in a full-time law practice of his own while he wrote all these novels and tales. ( )
1 abstimmen jburlinson | Nov 8, 2009 |
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A New York Times-bestselling novel of love, money, and ambition among the employees of a white-shoe law firm. From a renowned chronicler of American high society, this is a novel set in the small but distinguished New York law firm of Shepard, Putney & Cox in the early 1970s.   The son of a rich mother and a socially ambitious father, Beekman "Beeky" Ehninger makes a successful career for himself in the narrow upper echelons of his profession. For years, he has quietly guided his firm through numerous periods of transition--not to mention marital strife, forgery, and fraud. But as times have changed, Beeky and his colleagues must decide whether to join forces with a new and different breed--tough, but undeniably successful.   The Partners is a masterful characterization of moral men navigating an amoral world, of lawyers, their families, and the rich and powerful people they serve.   "Vintage Auchincloss--sensitive, ironic, sympathetic, affecting. Auchincloss is particularly good with the interior reality of seemingly minor conflicts; he also shows, over and over again, that seemingly large and dramatic conflicts are often not the important ones." --New York magazine

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