Rating: - not quite.......
Sadly,i found this book to be very episodic and padded out to the enth degree.There was never an opportunity to engage with the characters or to feel any kind of emotion for their tragedy.Rather like the detective in the story i was left feeling rather duped though a little more clued up on English policing in Victorian times.
Rating: - The suspicions of Mr Whicher
What a huge disappointment this was. From the reviews and 'blurb' I'd imagined I'd be reading a thriller. Not a bit of it, this is a piece of history as painstakingly put together as it is mind numbingly dull to read. As a historical text book, this is fine, as a bedtime story, it is guaranteed to put you to sleep, as a holiday read it is a no no.
Rating: - I couldn't put it down...
I just finished this book last night and I have to say it is one of those books that you mourn finishing - What will I read now? I love social history but am not so much a historian that I can read straight-up history books although I keep trying. What I loved so much about this book is that the author clearly did painstaking research, not only around the story itself but in researching the social history of that time as it connected to the story being told. It brought Victorian England to life for me and all the characters in the story also. Add to that the extra flavour of describing the challenges posed to a fledgling role of a detective. I am a huge fan of CSI and was intrigued at the initial stumblings of the science of detection as described ... Read More:
Rating: - murder as social and cultural history
This excellent, readable book explores a number of fascinating strands of mid-Victorian social and cultural history through the story of a real-life child murder. In 1860 a four year old boy, Saville Kent, disappears from his nursery at his father's country house in Road, Wiltshire (now Rode, Somerset) and after a search is found murdered in an outside privy. It didn't need Sherlock Holmes or Fabian of the Yard to work out that the killer was a member of the household. And, as Kate Summerscale so ably demonstrates, Mr Kent's household was not the conventional Victorian happy home and there were any number of emotional and psychological undercurrents. The local police having proved themselves spectacularly incompetant, a detective was sent for from ... Read More:
Rating: - The Suspicions of Mr Whicher
Simply, this is a superb book. It is a great detective story (and it is - quite literally - the original detective story) ; it is also a great historical novel; but more than anything it is a great read.
When I picked this book up I simply couldnt put it down and finished it 12 hours or so later. I was entangled in the mystery, I first doubted and then believed in Mr Whicher, and then doubted him again when he failed. The resolution to the story hit me like a classic sucker punch, and then, right at the end another twist that stuck like a punch in the guts.
I cant recomend this book enough. It works as a whodunnit, but its much more. The author charts the history of the detective and provides somehing of a social history ... Read More: