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Book excerpt: “Godwin” by Joseph O’Neill

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Joseph O’Neill, author of “Netherland” (winner of the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction) and “The Dog,” returns with “Godwin” (Pantheon), a novel about a bizarre scheme to find the next international soccer star.

Read an excerpt below. 


“Godwin” by Joseph O’Neill

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A few years ago, my phone turned into a device for strangers and robots to butt in between me and whatever I’m doing. Any given caller was very likely a financial-verbal intruder. The simple buzzing of a phone began to frighten me. I decided to shun phone calls systematically, with an exception being of course made for Sushila—and even Sushila knows that, unless it’s urgent, a text is optimal. This decision was overdue. The general history of the telephone call, it can safely be said, is a grim one. Who can begin to measure or even grasp the volume of the calamities reported or produced by this sound-transmission system? It was with very good reason, I now understand, that my father invariably commanded me to ignore the ringing beige gadget stationed in the living-room bookcase. Together he and I would wait, all activity put on hold, for the shrill to stop, an interlude of suspense that could last a minute or more, because in those landline days there was nothing to stop a caller from sticking at it indefinitely, and often the house would be filled with that eerie, seemingly infinite electronic cry, and often this cry would be followed by a second, appellate cry undertaken in the hope, perhaps, that the first call had been misdialed or that my father had just stepped through the door or climbed out of the bathtub. Dad refused to get an answering machine. As a concession to me—I was a high school freshman; it was newly important for me and my friends to be in constant discussion—he permitted me to pick up the phone, but only on the condition that, should the caller ask for him, I would declare him to be “not presently available.” This was the formulation he insisted on.

The point is that I’ve developed my father’s aversion to the phone. It’s two days before I get back to Geoff.

“Hey, Markie,” he says. “Thanks for calling, fam. Sorry to barge in on you.”

“Don’t be crazy,” I say.

I will say that I love my brother’s voice, which I hear so rarely. It is a voice from a complementary, more summery world that once was or could never be. It’s the voice of love long lost or long impossible. That is where things stand in the matter of me and my brother’s voice.

He informs me that he finds himself “in a bit of a tight corner.” He wonders if I might be able to set aside a few days to fly to England in order to help him with “this business opportunity.” He’s had some kind of accident and isn’t able “to do, you know, mobility.” He adds, laughing a little, “It’s a big ask, bruv, I’ll be real. If you can’t come, I’ll understand completely.”

“You’re hurt?”

“Nah, fam, I’m all right.” As he says this, he texts me a photograph of a leg in a cast. Crutches rest against the couch.

“Jesus. You’re really banged up.”

“Yeah, it might be a while before I kick a ball.” He continues, “Fing is, Markie, I need someone I can absolutely trust. I’m not going to lie, there’s a lot riding on this.” He says more, including the assertion that, “if it comes off, there’s going to be a serious— I mean serious, fam—payday down the road for all of us.”

To be polite and for no other reason, I ask him about the time frame.

“We’re looking at a week. Tops. I’ll take care of your expenses, fam. That’s not an issue.” He says this very coolly.

“Let me think about it.”

I’m not going to think about it. A simple rule applies here: no monkey business. An unexplained mission entailing up-front expenditure by me and back-end reimbursement by him? A big payoff that may or may not materialize? That looks a lot like monkey business to me. Geoff is, to the best of my knowledge, a soccer agent. It’s a legitimate line of work, but it’s not exactly a bishopric. More basically, the whole idea is nuts: I drop everything and set off on an exotic self-financed journey to help him? Who does he think I am—Captain Haddock?

To my astonishment, Sushila takes a very different view. “You’ll get to spend time with your brother,” she says. “When was the last time that happened? I think you should think it over.”

We’ve finished dinner. I’m loading the dishwasher. If I have a vocation, it is stacking dishware, glassware, and cookware with maximal efficiency.

Her voice goes on: “Why not go? It’ll be an adventure.”

“An adventure?” I’ve spent years fighting my impulsiveness. Nobody knows this better than Sushila. Now she wants me to fly across the world for an adventure?

When I was ten years old and living in Portland, Oregon, my father announced, “You have a baby brother,” and little by little further specifics reached me, including the fact that he was in “England.” This hearsay bore a fabulous geographic tinge that has never completely faded. I came to believe that this baby was born in a land far away from his true home—that is, from my home—and as far as I was concerned, he was a foundling of sorts and it was my duty to track him down and repatriate him. I got out an atlas and discovered where England was. I determined that with a team of huskies I could quite feasibly navigate the frozen surfaces of Canada and Baffin Bay and Greenland, from where I’d hitch a ride on a fishing boat across the Greenland Sea, to Iceland, from where another trawler would transport me across the nameless and terrible body of water between Iceland and the Faroe Islands. From the Faroes it would be a relatively simple matter to get to the Orkney Islands and, finally, mainland Britain. I had no route planned for the return trip. I did, however, foresee that the two brothers (suddenly and miraculously closer in age) would be involved in great perils and great deeds of bravery. To this day I retain several of those visions and can still see, in the flash frames of a child’s eye, two boys, on foot in the desert, pausing to share water from a flask; the same two boys riding side by side on white horses; and, vividly, a snowy drama in which our heroes for some reason find themselves bobsledding. Their sled races along a pale and curving track. The two boys are crouched very close to one another in the cockpit, and in spite of everything—the icy chute, the stormy and thundering descent, the obscure, determined pursuers—they are warm and safe.

The next day, I inform the people at work that I will be taking my accrued leave. Then I set off on a journey across the Atlantic. It has occurred to me, at long last, that maybe the brother in difficulty isn’t Geoff.

     
Excerpted from “Godwin” by Joseph O’Neill. Copyright © 2024 by Joseph O’Neill. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


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“Godwin” by Joseph O’Neill

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For more info:

  • “Godwin” by Joseph O’Neill (Pantheon), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats    



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Tracking the hours before a young Minnesota woman became a murder victim

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On Dec. 15, 2022, Matthew Ecker was headed to work when he said he got a frantic call from his former co-worker and friend Alex Pennig. He said Pennig told him she got in a fight with her boyfriend Shane Anderson and was scared of what he might do. So, Ecker took his gun, which he owned legally, and drove to Pennig’s St. Paul, Minnesota, apartment.

Matthew Ecker and Alex Pennig
Matthew Ecker, left, and Alex Pennig

Terri Randall/Mary Jo Pennig


Ecker arrived around 2 p.m. He would later say his only reason for going to Pennig’s was to protect her. 

Early the next morning, Pennig was shot dead in her apartment. Detectives used surveillance footage to piece together her final moments.

The altercation

Camp Bar security video
From left, Shane Anderson, Alex Pennig and Matthew Ecker inside Camp Bar.

Ramsey County District Court


Pennig and Ecker went out to a few bars that evening and ended up at Camp Bar at 12:30 a.m. on Dec. 16, 2022. Anderson was at the bar. Surveillance video shows he walked over to Pennig and began talking to her. Ecker walked over to the two of them. Things got heated, and when Ecker stepped in between Pennig and Anderson, Anderson punched him. Anderson was kicked out of the bar and Pennig and Ecker stayed for about an hour drinking and chatting.

Matthew Ecker and Alex Pennig arrive home for the night

Alex Pennig, Matthew Ecker security camera video
Alex Pennig, followed by Matthew Ecker, arrive at Pennig’s apartment building after a night out.

Ramsey County District Court


At 2:05 a.m., Pennig and Ecker arrive at her apartment building after walking there from Camp Bar.

A return to the lobby

Alex Pennig security video
Alex Pennig is seen in the vestibule of her apartment building.

Ramsey County District Court


At 2:24 a.m., Pennig and Ecker are seen back in the lobby as they walk out of the building. Ecker would later say he was going to his car to get his headphones. Pennig (pictured) returned first and waited in the vestibule for Ecker. She paces around looking at her phone.

Alex Pennig last seen alive

Last image of Alex Pennig
Alex Pennig, foreground, and Matthew Ecker walk through the lobby together for the last time.

Ramsey County District Court


Ecker returns two minutes after Pennig at 2:30 a.m. The two then walk through the lobby and go back up to Pennig’s apartment. This is the last time Pennig was seen alive.

St. Paul police officers arrive on scene

St. Paul police arrive
Matthew Ecker meets St. Paul police officers responding to his 911 call in the lobby of Alex Pennig’s apartment building.

Ramsey County District Court


At 2:50 a.m., Ecker called 911 and reported that Pennig shot herself in the head. St. Paul police officers raced to the apartment building and Ecker let them inside at 2:56 a.m.

Matthew Ecker’s story

Matthew Ecker bodycam video
A distressed Matthew Ecker is seen on a police body camera as he talks to police in the hall outside Alex Pennig’s apartment.

Ramsey County District Court


After leading police officers to Pennig’s apartment, Ecker sat in the hallway, appearing distressed and emotional. Officer Justina Hser approached him and began asking him what happened. Their conversation, which lasted nearly an hour, was captured on her body camera. Ecker told her everything was fine between him and Pennig and that they did not have an argument. He said she grabbed his gun out of his backpack, backed into the bathroom and locked the door. Moments later, Ecker said he heard a shot, so he broke open the bathroom door to find Pennig laying on the floor with a gunshot wound to her left temple.

The weapon

Alex Pennig evidence

Ramsey County District Court


Responding officers located the gun. It was on Pennig’s chest with her left hand resting on top. They noted that this seemed odd. One officer then moved the gun to the sink (pictured) to place it in a safe position.

Notable evidence

Alex Pennig evidence
Evidence photo of the sink in Alex Pennig’s bathroom.

Ramsey County District Court


Ecker had told officers he washed his hands after trying to help Pennig, which is why his hands were clean. But the officers noticed that the bathroom sink was dry when they arrived. If Ecker had just washed his hands, detectives believed the sink probably would have still been wet.

A lack of evidence on Matthew Ecker

Matthew Ecker
Matthew Ecker photographed during his police interview.

Ramsey County District Court


Ecker was interviewed by detectives around 6:30 a.m. on Dec. 16, 2022. He had no visible blood on his body or his clothes. It was later discovered that Ecker also had no gunshot residue on him.

The defining evidence

Pennig evidence
This small piece of metal from a bathroom door lock was key evidence in the death of Alex Pennig.

Ramsey County District Court


While Ecker was being interviewed at the police station, the forensic unit processing the scene notified detectives that they had found a new piece of evidence once Pennig’s body was moved. It was a metal piece of the bathroom door lock, and it was discovered on the floor where Pennig’s head was. The detectives suspected that when Ecker broke open the door, that small metal piece landed on the bathroom floor. According to the detectives’ theory, Ecker broke open the bathroom door, then Pennig was shot and fell on top of the piece. They say this proves the bathroom door was forced open before Pennig was shot, and that Ecker had lied to them.

The accused: Matthew Ecker

Matthew Ecker booking photo
Matthew Ecker booking photo

Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office


On Dec. 19, 2022, Matthew Ecker is formally charged with second-degree murder. Ecker denies killing Alex Pennig.

The trial of Matthew Ecker    

Ramsey County Courthouse
Matthew Ecker’s trial took place at the Ramsey County Courthouse in St. Paul, Minnesota.

CBS News


On Feb. 8, 2024, Ecker’s trial begins. Eight days later, on Feb. 16, 2024, he is found guilty of second-degree murder.

Matthew Ecker sentencing

Matthew Ecker sentencing
Matthew Ecker at his sentencing for the second-degree murder of Alex Pennig.

CBS News


On April 3, 2024, Ecker is sentenced to 30 years in prison. He is appealing his conviction.



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The Uplift: An adaptable dog

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The Uplift: An adaptable dog – CBS News


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A dog wows onlookers by walking around town on his two hind legs — but it’s not a trick, it’s an adaptation. A woman decks out her house in eye-catching decorations each October, not for Halloween but for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Plus, more heartwarming stories.

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Eye on America: New hotel runs on clean energy, and growing threats of inland flooding

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Eye on America: New hotel runs on clean energy, and growing threats of inland flooding – CBS News


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In North Carolina, we learn about the growing threat of severe flooding facing inland communities. And in Connecticut, we check in at the only hotel in the country that runs entirely on renewable electricity. Watch these stories and more on “Eye on America” with host Michelle Miller.

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