“A Firing Offense” is an early novel of David Ignatius, who is a famous journalist at the Washington Post. I see him a lot on MSNBC as a foreign affairs expert, particularly on “Morning Joe”. After I finished the book, I looked him up on Wikipedia and see that he is a descendant of Cotton Mather, as well as the son of a Secretary of the Navy. He is the same age as myself and graduated Summa Cum Laude in Economics from Harvard. I got a degree from Kansas University in Econ the same year, (1973), and I can assure you I was not Summa Cum anything except Orange Barrel Acid and Lebanese hashish, both of which are currently out of print.
Ignatius does not write like a stuffed shirt douche from Harvard, and there are some fun parts to the novel where he displays a sort of contempt for the kind of person he would appear to be. The book is in the first person, and I like his voice, at least in the first half of the novel. He sounds like he does on “Morning Joe”, careful, under control, with a hint of impishness and an unpompous delivery.
My problem is that he tries to come off as a bit of an expert on China, which is the dark menace of the story, and falls into the common trap of seeing the Beijing government as a malevolent monolithic “borg” like entity that will consume the rest of the world with no conscience or concern for the larger issues, such as the well being of the planet or humankind in general. I don't agree with this assessment. He also makes the French out to be just as bad, which is weird because the French government gave him the “Legion of Honor” later for some reason.
He does display a knowledge of Beijing geography, describing the area around Wangfujing and Haidian. But he creates incidents in the city that do not seem at all likely and seems to imply that the Chinese would allow a foreign power, (France) leeway to do some despicable things in their own capital. I suppose anything is possible, but my experience tells me that this is a far-out right-wing fantasy, as well as provocative. But at the time he wrote it Yeltsin was in power in Russia, and the Tiananmen events were fresh, so it is understandable that China would be the “bad guy”.
Ignatius, supported the war in Iraq, (a forever black mark on his record) and has a peculiar history in having unique and almost "Oldboy network" access to American Intelligence (Glenn Greenwald - ”David Ignatius built his career on being a faithful spokesman of the most powerful”). In “A Firing Offense” his main character, Truell, a journalist, is ruined by his relationship with the CIA. In real life, it seems like that relationship has been a source of power to Ignatius, almost to the point of complicity.
His main character, Truell, has a love interest, a powerful woman journalist who sees things through the prism of personal relationships and peccadillos, someone like Maureen Dowd, who it is possible he knew as a youth, as they are both the same age and both grew up in Washington. In the novel, he and "Ann" were lovers when they were young and then again later in their thirties, and they make love in a respectful, gentle, and sensitive way, so you know it has no future, and she ends up with someone else. While the main character, Truell is somewhat interesting, and at first likable, the story really drifts and drags at the end.
I don’t recommend it.