By: John Boyne Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin Average Rating: Binding: Paperback Label: St. Martin's Griffin Number of Items: 1 Number of Pages: 368 Publication Date: January 23, 2007 Release Date: January 23, 2007
July 1910: A gruesome discovery has been made at 39 Hilldrop Crescent, Camden.
Chief Inspector Walter Dew of Scotland Yard did not expect the house to be empty. Nor did he expect to find a body in the cellar. Buried under the flagstones are the remains of Cora Crippen, former music-hall singer and wife of Dr. Hawley Crippen. No one would have thought the quiet, unassuming Dr. Crippen capable of murder, yet the doctor and his mistress have disappeared from London, and now a full-scale hunt for them has begun.
Across the Channel in Antwerp, the S.S. Montrose has just set off on its two-week voyage to North America. Slipping in among the first-class passengers is a Mr. John Robinson, accompanied by his teenage son, Edmund. The pair may be hoping for a quiet, private voyage, but in the close confines of a luxury ocean liner, anonymity is rare. And with others aboard looking for romance, or violence, or escape from their past in Europe, it will take more than just luck for the Robinsons to survive the voyage unnoticed.
An accomplished, intricately plotted novel, Crippen brilliantly reimagines the amazing escape attempt of one of history's most notorious killers and marks the outstanding American debut of one of Ireland's best young novelists.
Doesn't work as a novel The saga of "Doctor" Crippen would have probably yielded a fine true crime story but simply does not click as a novel, at least this one doesn't. I'm certain that the renowned facts of this infamous murder case somewhat limited (perhaps unconsciously) the author's ability to use his imagination and think more outside of the box.
WARNING! SPOILERS AHEAD!!!
The story here, based upon an actual account and dramatized, is about an American man who wanted to become a doctor but did not have the financial resources to do so. He enrolled in some medical correspondence training as a sop and began calling himself a doctor. Then Crippen ended up in London, practicing medicine (sort of), and found himself married to a hellish woman whom was eventually murdered and dismembered. Ultimately, the "doctor" attempts escape to Canada, along with a devoted lover, to avoid the subsequent investigation by a Scotland Yard Inspector. A chase across the Atlantic ensues.
The author took the key facts and other details of the Crippen murder case and built upon it... quite too much, in fact. The book is notably too long, by 100 pages at least, for the material covered and in the manner in which it was covered. The fact is, the story of Crippen, as extracted from this novel, could have been typed out, double-spaced, on two sheets of 8 1/2 x 11 paper, especially considering that no criminal trial details were incorporated into the tale.
There is a definite lack of character development here -- all the principals (Crippen excepted) seem superficial, vague... black-and-white. The author depends upon the reader to say, "Oh I know just the sort of person he means." We DO, but we still want him to tell us! While Boyne initially and briefly describes his characters, he fails to build upon them as the story blossoms.
The book is also pretty much devoid of the environmental caveats which make for a good cosy novel... neither the weather nor street activities are notably worked in as wallpaper, seagulls and terns do not buzz the ship as it sails from Antwerp, and so on. There is also a clear lack of historical ambiance, which this manuscript particularly needed since it is, in fact, that type of story. No other actual paralleling events of the period are mentioned in a way that would have enhanced the main theme, possibly cementing the reader to time and place. In this way, there's an absence of sub-plot.
The author did attempt to enhance the telling of the story by means of retrospective, intermittently changing time, activities, and place. However, the result of this approach, for me at least, was to catch myself thinking [in vain], "Get on with it!" I'm certain that Boyne wanted to personalize the reader to Crippen's horrific domestic life but this aspect of his work resulted in overkill. There WAS a singular turn-around surprise in the novel, (I cried, "Foul!"), but it does not endear the reader either to the story or to the author, a literary epiphany which I hope that Boyne, an author with potential, reconciles in his future writing endeavors.
To summarize, I would say that this effort was simply a mistake from its concept, although I credit the author for attempting it. As I read his work, I found myself always wishing, since the novel was so very close to the true story, that it had been written as such. I guess in my experience at reading "British mysteries," this one simply did not mesh with the more stereotypical ones. Neither did it break any new ground that I personally wished to explore.
not so good I was unable to finish this book due to the fact that the plot was plodding and predictable. (after getting about halfway through I decided to read the last 5 or so pages.) There were no likable characters or relationships. Overall, I was bored.
"It's rotten to the core. A thing of beauty in itself" Part murder mystery and part historical novel John Boyne's sensational Crippen: a Novel of Murder tells of the real Crippen murder case, which occurred in London in 1910. Boyne, in his story, beautifully brings to life this world in all its self-propriety grandeur, and in the process, emphasizes humanity's mordant desire to know the all the facts about the most macabre and chilling crimes such as this.
Boyne presents Crippen as a complex and enigmatic man - whom although painted as a monster for murdering his wife, chopping her up and burying pieces of her under the stones in his cellar - was in reality a meek and harmless person who probably wouldn't hurt a fly. The novel traces the historical journey of Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen from his childhood in Canada, where his worldview was shaped by his puritanical, severely religious mother.
Desiring to become a doctor, yet unable to be given all the advantages of education so that he might escape his family, Crippen travels to America, eventually finding work as a medical assistant, his second rate qualifications obtained through correspondence courses.
It is in New York where Hawley meets Cora Turner, a music hall dancer, who convinces him to take her to London so that she can fulfill her dream of becoming a famous diva. But Cora turns out to be a shrieking and violent harpy, a heartless, evil, nasty and manipulative witch, and a flagrantly vulgar, lustful and faithless wife who constantly hounds Hawley for not being socially good enough.
Cora ends up abusing Hawley physically, unashamedly sleeping with other men in their house. At first, he was her way out of the gutter and she was someone who listened to him and said she believed in him. Their fights would often end with her screaming at him, berating him, threatening him with frying pans and pots, while he would eventually agree to do whatever she asked. Mostly their arguments were caused by Hawley's inability to fund the lifestyle that Cora thought she deserved.
The macabre and the bloodthirsty always-fascinated Hawley. In fact, he was so proud of his abilities and so much in love with the art of medicine that for him "the music of pain was nothing more than a melody to work by." But was he evil enough to kill Cora and chop her up into little pieces? Social climbers Lady Louise Smythson and the Mrs. Margaret Nash certainly believe so. In fact, Louise Smythson is so convinced that Cora has met a nasty end in the hand of Hawley that she contacts Detective Walter Dew of New Scotland Yard to report what she think is a crime.
Meanwhile, on the SS Montrose, Captain Henry Kendall becomes suspicious of two first class passengers, a Mr. Robinson and his son Edmund when he catches them in a romantic embrace. For Captain Kendall the hug of a man with another man, a love affair between a father and son, defies all logic and decency. Mr. Robinson is in fact, Hawley Crippen traveling with much-younger mistress, Ethel LeNeve disguised as a boy.
Desperate to start a new life in Canada, Hawley and Ethel are unaware that the police, led by inspector Dew are hot on their trail. Ethel is totally in love with Hawley seeing her hero as kind and gentle, a man of peace, perhaps everything that his wife is not. As Boyne charts Hawley and Ethel's trip on the Montrose, he switches back and forth, filling in the details Hawley's life, both the demands of marrying Cora and the rewards of finding a girl like Ethel.
The novel is a fascinating gambol through Edwardian England, the author peppering his tale with a huge supporting cast. Although most of these people immediately rush to judgment on Hawley, Boyne cleverly figures that it's a bit to soon to automatically assume the doctor's guilt. Obviously Hawley's journey from Canada, to America to London and then back to Canada is littered with regrets and poor choices, but it is the heaviness of his marriage to Cora that encumbers his present situation.
It is to Boyne's talent as a writer that he can portray Hawley Crippen as an extremely sympathetic character - he may have a certain blood lust, and he may be unable to communicate love, but is he really a murderer? One thing is for sure; he's certainly carried away by Ethel's passion and loyalty, perhaps even tricked by the dramatic emotional roller coaster ride, even by their efforts to escape across the Atlantic Ocean to start a new life. Mike Leonard July 06.
Crippen An absolutely brilliant effort. Tightly plotted, with characters that call to mind a long-past era, this is one of the best historically-based novels of the new millenium.
How did this guy ever win a literary prize? On the basis of my interest in English murder mysteries, and because the Crippen case is a notorious one that is referenced often but that I've been unfamiliar with, I purchased this book. I'd hoped to learn about the case.
What I have learned so far, is that far from being a page turner, the book is a tiresome read. The fictionalization is more worthy of a poorly written romance novel than what one would assume would be a thriller. The characters are such unbelievable cliches (the Captain Bligh loving ship's captain especially) that it's difficult to relate to any of them.
I cannot recommend this book to anyone with more than half a brain.