Cash
McCall
(1955) is a novel by Cameron Hawley that is positive about business and
free-market capitalism. It explores many of the same themes as does Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged but it is not nearly as philosophical.
Like Atlas Shrugged, Cash McCall is
populated with a range of good and bad characters. It is also a 1959 film starring
James Garner and Natalie Wood. Despite some changes in the details, the film is
very similar to the book.
McCall is a notorious financial maverick
and mysterious millionaire who buys depressed companies, makes changes to them,
and sells them to make profits. He acquires companies in order to sell them
rather than to operate them. He adds value by making companies more effective
and/or by taking advantage of overlooked opportunities. Cash McCall’s name has
become legendary and he has become the subject of much gossip, rumor, and
innuendo. Many people call him a pirate and believe that he is an evil,
unprincipled, and immoral man. Others are jealous and envious of him.
Throughout the novel the reader, as well as characters in the book, discover
the true character of McCall, what he represents, and what he stands for.
In the novel we meet the weary Grant
Austen, who is worn down by the responsibilities of running his company,
Suffolk Moulding, a small family-owned plastics company. The only two owners
are Grant and his daughter, Lory. Although Grant Austen appears to be in a rut
and is not a great businessman, he is not exactly ready to retire. However, he
does fear that he is in danger of losing a vital contract.
Austen’s largest customer, Andscott
Instrument Corporation represents around 60 percent of
While reading a newspaper, Grant Austen
sees an ad that gives him the idea of selling his company. He discusses this idea
with his daughter, Lory, and then he tells Gil Clark, a management consultant
with Corporate Associates, that he is contemplating selling his business and
retiring. During their discussion, Austen did not disclose to Clark the
precarious situation that Suffolk was in with Andscott. He wants to create the
image that he simply wants to retire. Gil estimates to Austen Clark that two million dollars would be an extraordinary
amount to receive for his company. In a later conversation in the novel, Will
Atherson, President of Freeholders Bank and Trust Co. of Philadelphia provides
Austen with a similar estimate of
Gil Clark is a young management consultant
with integrity who understands the moral and practical value of capitalism,
business, and careers in business. He realizes that business can improve human
existence through the production of increasingly better products that
contribute to the fulfillment of individuals’ lives. In the beginning of the
novel Clark does not know that McCall owns the consulting firm that he works
for.
Harrison Glenn, Gil’s boss and President
of Corporate Associates, suggests Cash McCall to Gil as a potential buyer of
When Gil meets Cash he finds him to be a
moral businessman and a true gentleman who treats all parties in a business deal
with justice and fairness. Cash inform Gil that he is the owner of Corporate
Associates. Impressed with Gil’s character and business, Cash offers him a job
as his assistant.
Gil explains to Cash that he has no
objection to making money. In response, McCall proclaims his agreement with
this view: “In case there is any doubt in your mind, Gil, I don’t belong to the
better circles. I’m a thoroughly vulgar character—I enjoy making money.” (153).
Cash then scolds
…it
still strikes me as something of an anomaly that here, living under the profit
system—fighting and dying to defend it—we’ve come now to regard the
accumulation of profit as a crime against society. It’s gotten to the point now
where the only way a millionaire can expiate his sin is to endow a charity or a
cancer research foundation.” (154)
McCall does not condone the government’s
numerous and arbitrary tax laws and other regulations but he abides by, and
adapts to, and profits while so doing: “I don’t make the rules Gil, I only play
the game. I never thought much of the kick-for-point after touchdown, either,
but as long as it’s in the rule book, that’s the way the game is played.” (164)
Will Atherson, McCall’s banker and
friend of Grant Austen, was advising Austen regarding what to do with his
company and tells Austen that he thought that Cash McCall might be interested
in buying the company. Of course, Gil Clark has already brought the possible
acquisition of Suffolk Moulding to McCall’s attention.
Atherson calls Cash to tell him about
Austen’s company and mentions that Austen is meeting his daughter, Lory, at
three o’clock in the lobby of the hotel where Cash resides. Lory and Cash had a
brief romantic relationship in
Lory and Grant Austen go with McCall to
his apartment to discuss the possible sale of Suffolk to McCall. There Lory, an
illustrator of children’s books, sees the frontispiece drawing she had done for
a novel hanging on his wall. The drawing was clearly a portrait of Cash McCall.
Austen makes Cash aware that he and Lory are the sole stockholders in the
company and McCall informs Austen that he is the owner of Corporate Associates
where Gil Clark had worked and who has been advising Austen on business
matters. Cash wants to make certain that Austen is aware of the potential for bias
in
Lory
Austen for years had wanted to be independent of her parents, and the sale
proceeds of her ten percent ownership in
McCall
calls upon Gil Clark to take over the management of
Gil
sees Cash as a respectable and honest man who does not abandon his beliefs and
morality in his personal life and in his business life. McCall knows that to be
truly successful a man cannot sell his soul to make a profit. In his business
deals McCall seeks out win-win situations. Cash’s intentions with regard to
Suffolk Moulding are highly respectable. He tells Gil that he knows he could
have acquired the company for less than he offered. In Cash’s words, “There’s
only one way that I can get a wallop out of a deal like this, Gil. And that’s
by knowing that I haven’t dug money out of another man’s hide.” (211)
The lawyer, Winston Conway, speaks to
Gil about McCalls honesty, openness and morality:
“Yes
the practice of law would be much more pleasant these days if there were few
more gentlemen of Cash McCall stripe—and I use the word gentleman in its true
meaning. They’re becoming rare, you know, men who recognize the difference
between a thing being morally right
and legally right.” (227)
Grant Austen is not the best husband or
father, and recently has not done that well in business. He tends to suppress
his wife and daughter. He is not able to delegate at work and has been unable
to move his company forward. He is loyal to incompetent employees and once he
has sold his company, he finds that this loyalty is not reciprocated to him.
Austen’s former employees ignore him as soon as he sells the business. Austen
views life in terms of a series of win-lose outcomes. After he sold his
company, he was free to try to mend his family relationships. Unfortunately,
the sale of Suffolk leads him to lose his self-direction and self-identity. Austen
has always gained his self-worth from his status in society and his membership
in the business community. A man of low self-esteem and self-confidence, Austen
views and judges himself through the eyes of other people. Unknown to Austen,
McCall arranges for someone from
Cash McCall is not yet forty. Vibrant
and self-assured, he tries to stay anonymous, deals with secrecy, and values
his privacy. He keeps his ownership interest in various companies quiet and
only divulges his ownership when he believe that someone has the right to know
about it. Only Cash’s advisors can contact him. He surrounds himself with high
caliber people and has the ability to discern and develop new talent. Cash
lives in a penthouse suite (an entire floor) at the top of the Hotel Ivanhoe,
and has a direct phone number that bypasses the hotel switchboard. He also has
a country retreat home that is surrounded by mountains and that overlooks a
waterfall. Having made his first million dollars before he was thirty, McCall
flies a remodeled B-26 ex-military bomber. His two residencies complement the
two sides of his personality. His penthouse symbolizes success and his secluded
countryside retreat symbolizes freedom in his personal life.
Maude Kennard is the effective,
detail-oriented, power-seeking, and ambitious manager of the hotel where McCall
resides. At first she views Cash as an irritant to her because of his wealth
and ability to obtain whatever he wants. She changes her mind about McCall when
she eventually concludes that he owns the hotel. She becomes very interested in
him (perhaps even romantically), pursues him, and toward the end of the story,
tries to damage him. Cash of course has no interest in her. She even attempts
to attain a Lockwood Report to gain information about him.
Miriam Austen wants her daughter to
spend time with McCall. Lory drives Cash to the airport and he talks her into
getting on his private plane. They embark for his private estate where he
explains to her that he had fallen in love with her in
Gil begins managing Suffolk Moulding and
discovers that Suffolk owns the patents to the machines that produce Andscott’s
products. When Cash returns, Gil tells him about the valuable patents that
General Danvers needs to run his business. These patents are now McCall’s
property. Gil and Cash now realize that because of these essential patents,
McCall is now in a position to make a
significant profit on the purchase and sale of Suffolk Moulding. General
Danvers attempts to buy Suffolk for 300,000 shares of Andscott stock valued at
$ 3 million so that he can retain the patents. McCall initiates a plan in which
he can potentially gain central of both Suffolk and Andscott. He begins by
personally buying another 200,000 shares of Andscott on the market. Andscott
gives 300,000 shares of stock to Cash through Cash’s Gammer Corporation.
Cash has learned that a medical research
foundation established by Horace Andrews has a large block of Andscott stock.
The foundation depends upon Andscott dividends for funding its research
projects and no dividends have been paid for the last four years. Cash wants to
add the foundation’s proxy to the half million shares of Andscott that he has
acquired, thus giving him ownership control over Andscott and
Trouble begins to brew when Harvey
Bannon, President of Cavalier Chemical Company and a member of Andscott’s
board, divulges to Grant Austen that Andscott is giving 300,000 shares of stock
worth approximately $3 million to Cash (through Cash’s Gammer Corporation) for
Suffolk. Austen is furious because he thinks that McCall has duped him and made
a fool of him by turning right around to sell
The infuriated Austen seriously
considers a lawsuit against McCall. He suspects that Gil Clark, Harrison Glenn,
Will Atherson, Winston Conway, and others are all part of the “McCall gang” and
conspired against him. Austen appears to forget that he had wanted cash rather
than stock. What had actually occurred was the result of a number of remarkable
coincidences involving the above individuals—there was no conspiracy. The
parties involved all agree that they would be willing to give Austen back his
company if that was what he wanted. Cash and the rest of the “McCall gang” are
willing to reverse the sale.
Cash goes to see Austen to see if he can
clear up matters. Lory reminds her father that Cash had been upfront from the
beginning and told him that he owned Gil’s company. During the conversation
between the Austens, Lori, and Cash, all of the evidence is presented and
explained and the air is cleared. Austen then understands what really
transpired. Austen realizes that it was he who had not been forthcoming when he
had withheld information about the potential loss of a major customer. He also
remember how happy he had been with the price he received, how Cash had
suggested that he receive legal council, and how Cash had asked him if he was
certain he wanted to go through the deal. In the end, Cash is shown to be an
ethical financial maverick who finds the romantic relationship that he had been
lacking.
The
Rational Argumentator