The Fly on the wall

by Tony Hillerman

Paper Book, 1990

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Publication

New York : HarperPaperbacks, 1990.

Description

Fiction. Mystery. Thriller. HTML: Ace reporter John Cotton is a fly on the wall, seeing all, hearing all, and keeping out of sight. But the game changes when he finds his best friend's corpse sprawled on the marble floor of the central rotunda of the U.S. Capitol. Suddenly Cotton knows too much about a scandal centered around a senatorial candidate, a million-dollar scam, and a murder. And he hears the pursuing footsteps of powerful people who have something to hide . . . and a willingness to kill to keep their secrets hidden..

User reviews

LibraryThing member SusanOleksiw
This mystery is the second one published by Hillerman, after his first mystery set in Navajo country, The Blessing Way.

In the Fly on the Wall, John Cotton is a statehouse reporter and has just filed his story when a colleague comes into the pressroom. Merrill McDaniels, known as Mac, comes into
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file his story, but he’s a little drunk and Cotton offers to file something for him and tell his editor he went home sick. Cotton tries to get him on home but Mac says he’s celebrating breaking the story of a lifetime. Cotton doesn’t really believe him, but Mac heads on home. A few minutes later a man enters and rummages through Mac’s desk looking for his notebook, telling Cotton that Mac forgot it and sent his friend for it. A few minutes later Mac is found dead.

So begins Cotton’s at first desultory investigation into the big story Mac was working on. He finds Mac’s notebook, traces back the other man’s investigation, and wonders what Mac could have been excited about. When another reporter is killed driving Cotton’s car, Cotton at first thinks only it was an accident. He keeps digging, looking for the story while the other reporters are covering Governor Roark’s political future, Senator Clark’s plans, and small struggles over legislation. Then Cotton begins to have enough pieces to put together into a small puzzle, and he gets another warning, this one unmistakable in its meaning.

This is a masterfully plotted and steadily paced mystery that brings forward all the details of a major scam, how the players hide themselves and their cronies, and how easy it is to fool the tax payer, the reporters, and other politicians. Hillerman offers one surprise after another, and even the last two pages brings a stunning reversal. Hillerman was a journalist for many years, and his skill and experience show on every page.
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LibraryThing member franoscar
This is Hillerman's 2nd novel & the only one that doesn't take place where all the others take place. The plot involves a reporter having to deal with a big story involving state government corruption. There are murders & escapes, and also a lot of worrying because the scandal will tarnish a good
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governor getting ready to fight a bad man for a senate seat. It is readable but dragged a bit.
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LibraryThing member tzelman
Convoluted suspense tale. Sufficiently murky and danger-laden, albeit confusing.
LibraryThing member iayork
Anachronistic: Tony Hillerman's The Fly on the Wall has not aged particularly well. Written in 1971, early in his career, the book has been bypassed by technological advances as well as Hillerman's success with the Leaphorn/Chee series. Knowing that no future tales of John Cotton, newspaperman,
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have been written made getting into the book a little more difficult than I expected.

The characters and setting don't fit well with what one has come to think of as a "Tony Hillerman" book - that combination of Native Americans, their folklore, and the Southwest. To a man (and a woman), the characters are all extremely liberal in their political viewpoint. If you're convinced there's a liberal bias in the mainstream press, this novel will do nothing to disabuse you of that notion. Even if you do subscribe to the dominant point of view, you may be disappointed by some of the things liberalism's used to excuse in the final chapter. Perhaps the book's greatest weakness is the lack of alternate viewpoints explored: there are no real Republican characters either as foils or villains and this makes for some uninspired conflict and ultimately an unsatisfying resolution.

Part way through the book I found myself wishing Cotton would get himself out of a jam by making a cellphone call, or fax or e-mail his stories in to his editor, then I remembered - 1971! None of those things existed. Teletype machines and direct-dial long distance were the high tech of the day; even though photocopiers existed, Cotton still uses carbon paper throughout the story to make duplicates of his stories written on a manual typewriter. If you're nostalgic for these things, then you'll probably get more out of the story than I did.

The Southwest makes a brief appearance in the middle of the book when Cotton tries to find sanctuary there. While not quite as picturesque as in the Leaphorn/Chee books, this brief respite in New Mexico marks the point where the novel really picks up steam. Here and in Cotton's escape from the vacant Capitol building near the end of the novel are the two parts where Hillerman's pacing and plotting really shine. Compared to these fast-paced action scenes, the talky final chapter and the lengthy set-up in the first half of the book are big disappointments.

The Fly on the Wall isn't a terrible book, but it's clearly not Hillerman's best. If you're caught up on the latest Navajo novels, go ahead and tackle this one, but there's really no reason to go out of your way for it.
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LibraryThing member tjsjohanna
For a guy who makes his living with words, John Cotton is pretty canny about staying alive. The most interesting thing about this novel is the tension between two idea: one, that the general public deserves the unbiased facts and two, that the ends justify the means - you can't rely on the public
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to make the right choice. In the current political climate, it certainly appears that the news media has chosen in favor of the second idea. And I find myself coming down in favor of the first. The ends don't justify the means for me.
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LibraryThing member ritaer
The meat of the story is the digging through paperwork to figure out how and where the corruption is happening. It is hard to make numbers and files interesting for the reader. Hillerman handles it pretty well, partly by mixing in some potential love interest. I wish we gat a little more backstory
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on Joe Cotton. We get a clue that his mother may have been an abusive alcoholic, but we don't learn much about what shaped his career up to the point at which the book starts. Why does he seem to have no friends, even among coworkers, and so on. The action scenes of being stalked by the hitman, first in the New Mexico mountains and later in the deserted capital building are good. Worth a read, but not a keeper for rereading.
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LibraryThing member sail7
The ending of this book was underwhelming. Some political themes that have not gone stale in 40 (!) years. Good buildup of the situation, but unsatisfying resolution (or lack thereof) to several plot threads. The last chapter drags. I am assuming this is one of HIllerman's first works (c. 1971). I
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love the Leaphorn/Chee books and have read almost all of them. If you like those books, don't bother with this one. I'll have to go read a Leaphorn/Chee book now to remind myself how good Tony Hillerman can be.
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LibraryThing member danhammang
This is a thoroughly enjoyable book. The plot is good, the characters believable. You may need to be a follower of the news industry because Hillerman digs deep into his career as a journalist to write this book. It is set in an era that is hard to believe now, once existed: late night rifling of
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file cabinets, afternoon dailies competing against morning dailies and traveling incognito. You might be curious if you weren't around then and if you were it's a fun, nostalgic walk. There is also a great sub plot of journalistic ethics. And, of course, if you are a fan of Hillerman's Navajo Tribal Police series, this is a chance to check out his writing before he started that series. I should also add that I read the 'Armchair Detective Library' republication and it was a pleasure to read, excellent binding and high quality paper.
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LibraryThing member buffalogr
This is an enjoyable book. The plot is good, the characters believable. The story involves digging through paperwork to figure corruption. The story has been bypassed by technological advances since it's 1971 writing. That said, it's a convoluted suspense tale. Yes, it's a non-Navajo story set in a
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nameless state capitol. It shows a lot of research that went unused in subsequent Navajo books for which he is famous.
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LibraryThing member JBarringer
This was a fun, fast read. It might be a bit dry for readers who are not interested in political thrillers and state-level politics, but it is well thought out and well paced. Mr. Cotton is a bit more naive than I would have expected, given his resume, but had he been quicker to figure out that his
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life was in danger, the story might have been quite a bit different.
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LibraryThing member SandyAMcPherson
Excellent political thriller revealing how journalists can dig through apparently trivial data to reveal corruption in high places. I particularly appreciated the philosophical discussions about what constitutes ethical journalism and reporting all the facts versus what should be kept confidential
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for the greater good in politics: can we trust the electorate to be wise enough to judge? At times the convoluted details of how the scam was achieved escaped me, but that didn't detract from the suspense. Very believable scenarios that are probably just as relevant today. Lost one star because [spoiler warning] during an airplane trip, the clever journalist was portrayed as a dummy when he started detailing exactly where he was headed for a fishing trip. The subsequent antics lacked realism after the gritty city detective work that came across as genuine. I would recommend this despite that shortcoming to any reader who enjoys political murder stories and suspenseful thrillers.
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LibraryThing member ajlewis2
Unlike Hillerman's Navaho mysteries, this story takes place in D.C. The main character is a news reporter who is originally from out west. He is uncovering the truth about a story as well as the truth about the story of a woman he's attracted to. What really is his job as a reporter? Throughout his
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seeking he finds himself in mortal danger where he uses his wits and luck. He's a man without super powers. The plot is intriguing and the characters are rich. I very much enjoyed this book.
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LibraryThing member lbswiener
The Fly on the Wall is not one of Tony Hillerman's better books. In fact it was difficult to follow to wonder what was this book all about. Okay there is really a fly on the wall. This book is not recommended hence only two stars.
LibraryThing member DrApple
You can tell this is Hillerman's early work. It lacks the character development and atmosphere of his later works. This deals with New Mexico state politics and reporter uncovering corruption.
LibraryThing member A.Godhelm
This is not part of the Navajo series of books. It's a self contained journalism based mystery story.

Reading it was like unearthing a time capsule of Hillerman's impressions of being a journalist in the 60s. A lot of the mechanics of journalism in the book is wonderfully archaic, predating the
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ubiquity of computing only just. The corruption uncovered in the novel however reads exactly like something out of the current news cycle. The more things change, the more they stay the same. It's a surprisingly fresh novel despite being half a century old at this point and I'd place it closest in my pop culture lexicon with The Wire season 2.
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Awards

Edgar Award (Nominee — Novel — 1972)

Language

Original publication date

1971

ISBN

0061000280 / 9780061000287
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