Who doesn’t like a charming and lovable rascal? A character who is as bewitching and bemusing to readers as he is puzzling and slightly flawed. Among all of Ivan Doig’s memorable and delightful fictional creations, Morrie Morgan stands out as one of the best. He is a perplexing combination of deep and vast erudition, endearing humor, and a questionable and slightly shady history. But he is honest as the day is long and strives always to do the right thing.
In Sweet Thunder, Morrie returns to Butte, Montana where, a year ago, his heart fused with Grace’s and, after marriage, they indulged in a year-long honeymoon. What draws them back is an unusual bequest from Samuel Sandison, a larger-than-life former rancher who meted out swift justice to cattle rustlers and horse thieves. But Sandison has long since traded in his spurs and ready noose to indulge his unlikely passion as book collector of fine and rare editions. Sandy, as he is known, is also the benefactor of the Butte Public Library.
The other key player in this fast-paced novel is the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, a ruthless organization with monopolistic tendencies. Since it is the area’s largest employer, it is also inclined to play fast and loose with people’s livelihoods motivated solely by a profit-making urge. Inevitably, Morrie is drawn reluctantly into the town’s conflict with a desire to right the wrongs of the Anaconda Company. His only weapon is a fledgling newspaper called Sweet Thunder in which he takes on the role of editorialist with the by-line of Pluvius.
Apart from Sandy, along for the rollercoaster ride are a host of endearing and enduring “good guys”: a young, somewhat idealistic novice politician, his schoolteacher wife (whom herself was taught by Morrie years ago—see reviewer note below), a thundering chief editor, a couple of dwarf-like handymen named Griff and Hoop, and an acrobatic, teenage orphan nicknamed Russian Famine. Naturally, for every good guy there is a bad: these take the shape of every Anaconda official, a rival newspaper called The Post, and of course, a nemesis editor for Morrie named Cutlass Cartwright. There are even some nonmalignant crooks, such as the Highliner, a seasoned bootlegger boss who transports his illegal wares in egg delivery trucks…and who also happens to be a Morrie look-alike!
The stage is set for a rough ride for Morrie. There is intrigue, sadness and disappointment, happiness and triumph, losses, gains, enemies, allies, and high humor. And all the while, Morrie is constantly under the threat of his dubious past catching up with him. In fact, his delightful but high-principled bride, Grace, hears enough to keep her distance from him. How Morrie fights and wins battles—and wins back Grace’s heart—is Ivan Doig at his best. Readers will feel Doig’s enjoyment as he spins this story. Sweet Thunder is almost a caper-like novel, with enough twists and turns to keep readers flipping the pages.
As in all his novels, Doig’s deep love for his home state of Montana shines through his writing. He is a gifted and master storyteller, and though lightly-plotted, Doig’s simple writing belies its subtle sophistication. Read any one of Doig’s thirteen novels—not one of them will disappoint!
[Reviewer note: If Morrie Morgan intrigues readers enough, they may read about his previous exploits in The Whistling Season and Work Song.]