Authors: Lawrence Wright
There was no answer. But then, Tony really didn't expect to hear one. He wouldn't have answered, either, if he were God, and God were Tony Noriega.
This novel does not pretend to be a journalistic account of General Manuel Antonio Noriega and his seven-year reign in Panama. Some of the people chronicled here are part composite, part invention. This was done to allow myself the freedom necessary to imagine the thoughts, feelings, and actions of literary characters. In the case of the Nuncio and his secretary, for example, I have imposed my own characters in place of their real-life counterparts. The book largely follows the true events that occurred between September 13, 1985, when Dr. Hugo Spadafora was assassinated, and the U.S. invasion of Panama on December 20, 1989.
My character, Tony Noriega, is a creature of my imagination. Although his actions are structured upon the facts of General Noriega's life as I understand them, my goal in this book is to create a personality who lives plausibly within these pages. It may help the reader to know that, in addition to General Noriega's conviction for racketeering and conspiring to manufacture and import cocaine into the United States, for which he is currently serving a thirty-year sentence in federal prison in Miami, he has also been convicted in absentia in Panama for his involvement in the murders of Hugo Spadafora and Major Moisés Giroldi. The scenes of his direct participation in those murders are my own creations. Hugo Spadafora's head has never actually been found.
Thanks are due to many helpful people who contributed their knowledge and insight in the preparation of this book. At the top of the list is my friend and invaluable guide Berta Ramona Thayer, a lawyer and journalist whose universal access to people in all ranks of Panamanian society made my visits there both productive and delightful. I would also like
to offer special thanks to Mario Rognoni, General Noriega's former spokesman and one of Central America's great raconteurs; Roberto Eisenmann, founder of
La Prensa;
Guillermo Sánchez Borbón, whose outspoken and wonderfully mischievous columns for that paper helped bring Noriega down; José Blandón, who was Noriega's chief political adviser; Roberto DÃaz Herrera; former president Ernesto Pérez Balladares; former vice president Ricardo Arias Calderón; and MayÃn Correa, a brave journalist who became mayor of Panama City. In addition, I am happy to acknowledge the debt I owe to Aquilino Boyd, Pablo Thalassinos, Carlos Duque, Daniel Delgado, Escolastico Calvo, Ricardo Bermudez, Dr. Gioconda Gaudiano, Pedro Rognoni, Fernando Quesada, Lucho Delgado, and Manuel SolÃs Palma, each of whom afforded me generous amounts of time and precious observations about their country and the complicated man who held it in his grasp.
Several books were also extremely helpful to my understanding of Noriega and Panama; in particular I point to Kevin Buckley's
Panama,
Frederick Kempe's
Divorcing the Dictator,
John Dinges's
Our Man in Panama,
Roberto DÃaz Herrera's
Panama: PolÃtica y magia;
R. M. Koster and Guillermo Sánchez's
In the Time of the Tyrants,
José de Jesús MartÃnez's
La Invasión de Panamá,
Steve Albert's
The Case Against the General,
MayÃn Correa's
Sin concesiones,
and Luis Murillo's encyclopedic
The Noriega Mess.
General Noriega wrote an autobiography with Peter Eisner titled
America's Prisoner,
which presents his version of events. Stephanie C. Kane's delightful book on the Choco,
The Phantom Gringo Boat,
helped me understand that culture.
In this country I was assisted by David Adams, Ricardo Ainslie, John Burnett, and Mac Chapin. Several friends read the manuscript at various stages and offered their guidance, including Lee Aitken, Matthew Fox, Nancy Hardin, Jan McInroy, James Magnuson, and Wendy Weil. I am also grateful to David Rosenthal and Geoffrey Kloske at Simon & Schuster for their valuable editorial guidance. Stephen Harrigan's counsel has always been wise and generous, and his friendship has lit the lonely path of the writer's life for nearly twenty years. Finally I must acknowledge my wife, Roberta, whose love and good humor have sustained me through many uncertain times. For all the help I've been given by these friends and colleagues, I say thanks and thanks again.
Lawrence Wright was born in Oklahoma City in 1947 and reared in Dallas, Texas. He is a graduate of Tulane University and the American University in Cairo. He is a staff writer for
The New Yorker
and the author of five previous books of nonfiction:
City Children, Country Summer
(1979),
In the New World: Growing Up with America, 1960â1984
(1988),
Saints & Sinners
(1993),
Remembering Satan
(1994), and
Twins: And What They Tell Us About Who We Are
(1998). This is his first novel. He has won the National Magazine Award for Reporting as well as the John Bartlow Martin Award for Public Interest Magazine Journalism. In 1992 he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. For the past twenty years he has made his home in Austin, Texas.
ALSO BY LAWRENCE WRIGHT
City Children: Country Summer
In the New World:
Growing Up with America, 1960â1984
Saints & Sinners
Remembering Satan
Twins:
And What They Tell Us About Who We Are
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2000 by Lawrence Wright
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Simon & Schuster and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Designed by Leslie Phillips
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Wright, Lawrence, date.
God's favorite : a novel / Lawrence Wright.
p.  cm.
1. PanamaâHistoryâ1981âFiction. I. Title.
PS3573.R53685 G63 2000
813'54âdc21
99-048508
ISBN 0-684-86810-5
ISBN-13: 978-1-4391-2951-7 (eBook)