A Madness So Discreet by Mindy McGinnis
New York, NY : Katherine Tegen Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, 2016.
376 p. ; 22 cm.
There is a lot to like about this revenge tale of murder and mystery set in the late 1800s. The writing is smart, the characters are interesting and the novel has a dark edge that will appeal to readers who don't like their plots sweetened with syrupy romances and neat, happy endings.
The main character, Grace, is a striking figure - a young woman of a wealthy, influential family who is imprisoned in a Boston insane asylum because she has become pregnant. The author has done a bit of research into the treatment of the "insane" and of women declared insane and developed a disturbing and satisfying novel out of the material. If you want to see the benign asylum where Grace escaped to in Ohio, you can check out this page from Ohio University.
A lot of the plot springs out of the fact that Grace is an incest survivor who - having escaped Boston - wants to protect her younger sister from the perpetrator, and wants to exact revenge on him. Did I also mention that she works undercover with a doctor in order to solve (by profiling) murders, particularly a murder involving a serial killer. Her victimization, escape, hopes for revenge and protective zeal for her sister all come together in a dramatic conclusion that strains credibility, but is satisfying nonetheless.
Overall, I wasn't crazy about A Madness, but I will recommend it - with its historical background, strong female characters, and grim storyline it has a lot to offer a reader.
Showing posts with label serial killers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label serial killers. Show all posts
Friday, January 26, 2018
Monday, October 5, 2015
Ghostly Thrills
Famous Last Words by Katie Alender
New York, NY : Point, 2014.
312 p. ; 22 cm.
I'm usually no fan of books about serial killers - but I decided to read this one since it got many positive reviews, including being chosen for YALSA's 2015 Top Ten Quick Picks for reluctant readers.
I found Famous Last Words an entertaining read. I liked that its focus is not so much on the details of the murders that are happening in the world of the main character, but instead on the life of teen protagonist, Willa, as she has wrestles with grief over her deceased father and her radically new life in Hollywood where her new step-father is a well-known and very wealthy movie director.
To complicate matters, there is a ghost in the new house where Willa and her mother now live. Willa also has to navigate life as a new student in a new high school where she makes one new friend, Marnie, and comes to have a reluctant friendship with Wyatt, her lab partner who has a creepy obsession with the murders. Throw a very cute and romantic young assistant to her new father into the mix and the plot just zooms along.
It's not a great read, but it's a fun read, and one I'd recommend to any student asking if we had a good thriller, or murder mystery, or ghost story, or romance - or all of the above!
Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Terrific Fair, Fairly Terrible
The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson
New York : Vintage Books, 2004, c2003.
1st Vintage Books ed.
xi, 447 p. : ill., maps, music ; 21 cm.
This is a fantastic and haunting book about the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago. Larson's book manages to convey just how incredible the feat of Chicago's hosting the world's fair was (having just over 2 years to organize and build the entire fair venue) - while also telling the story of serial killer Henry H. Holmes and his immense frauds and scams that helped him elude capture for so long.
The book is a wonderful glimpse into the turn of the century world of the US and Chicago, which had been destroyed by fire only a little over twenty years before.
The reader gets to learn so much about the founding architects of Chicago, the landscaping prowess of John Olmsted - creator of NYC's Central Park - the amazing invention of the Ferris Wheel and the massive turnout of visitors to the fair (including a one day attendance total of over 750,000 people!). Following the story of killer, H.H. Holmes, also gives the reader a feel for the fast and loose business dealings of the day, the ease with which people could assume false identities, and the plodding nature of police investigations at the turn of the century.
I will definitely recommend this book to anyone who is interested in Chicago history, true crime stories, and just an amazing read.
New York : Vintage Books, 2004, c2003.
1st Vintage Books ed.
xi, 447 p. : ill., maps, music ; 21 cm.
This is a fantastic and haunting book about the 1893 World's Fair in Chicago. Larson's book manages to convey just how incredible the feat of Chicago's hosting the world's fair was (having just over 2 years to organize and build the entire fair venue) - while also telling the story of serial killer Henry H. Holmes and his immense frauds and scams that helped him elude capture for so long.
The book is a wonderful glimpse into the turn of the century world of the US and Chicago, which had been destroyed by fire only a little over twenty years before.
The reader gets to learn so much about the founding architects of Chicago, the landscaping prowess of John Olmsted - creator of NYC's Central Park - the amazing invention of the Ferris Wheel and the massive turnout of visitors to the fair (including a one day attendance total of over 750,000 people!). Following the story of killer, H.H. Holmes, also gives the reader a feel for the fast and loose business dealings of the day, the ease with which people could assume false identities, and the plodding nature of police investigations at the turn of the century.
I will definitely recommend this book to anyone who is interested in Chicago history, true crime stories, and just an amazing read.
Friday, September 26, 2014
Nothing Natural About It
The Naturals by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
New York : Hyperion, [2013]
308 p. ; 22 cm.
It's probably no surprise that I didn't care for this novel. Most of what I wrote about Barry Lyga's I Hunt Killers applies here. I'm just not interested in being entertained by the lurid retelling of serial killer exploits, but this novel scored VOYA's perfect 10s, so I kind of felt like I had to give it a chance.
So how was it aside from the serial killer aspect? It was all right, but I just never could really believe that the characters were real people. The novel for me felt like watching a TV show (and it's interesting that many of its fans reference TV shows in their reviews).
I don't want to be too negative about the book, so I'll just defer to fans of serial killer and murder/thrillers. They love it! So if there's a student who is interested in this topic, I'll be sure to mention that this is a fun, thrilling and interesting read in that direction - with a plot that is sure to satisfy.
New York : Hyperion, [2013]
308 p. ; 22 cm.
It's probably no surprise that I didn't care for this novel. Most of what I wrote about Barry Lyga's I Hunt Killers applies here. I'm just not interested in being entertained by the lurid retelling of serial killer exploits, but this novel scored VOYA's perfect 10s, so I kind of felt like I had to give it a chance.
So how was it aside from the serial killer aspect? It was all right, but I just never could really believe that the characters were real people. The novel for me felt like watching a TV show (and it's interesting that many of its fans reference TV shows in their reviews).
I don't want to be too negative about the book, so I'll just defer to fans of serial killer and murder/thrillers. They love it! So if there's a student who is interested in this topic, I'll be sure to mention that this is a fun, thrilling and interesting read in that direction - with a plot that is sure to satisfy.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
I Hate Killers
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Cain by Henri Vidal, Paris |
New York : Little, Brown, 2012
359 p. ; 22 cm.
"Serial murder is a relatively rare event, estimated to comprise less than one percent of all murders committed in any given year. However, there is a macabre interest in the topic that far exceeds its scope and has generated countless articles, books, and movies." -- FBI Serial Murder Report, 2005
I guess I'm just a bit of a contrarian when it comes to many things that popular culture offers as entertainment, and the popularity of serial killer entertainment (e.g. Silence of the Lambs or Dexter) is one of them. It's a form of entertainment that leaves me feeling manipulated and repulsed - and that's how I felt after reading Lyga's serial killer novel - I Hunt Killers. I know this puts me in a minority, because the novel is very popular.
The novel attempts to be a compassionate and complex thriller whose hero is Jasper, a 17 year old raised by his now imprisoned father who is a sadistic, methodical, diabolical, and sickeningly brilliant serial killer. The father exposed young Jasper to all the gruesome details of his crimes in the hopes of turning him into a killer like himself. And so the conflict - as Jasper becomes a man, will he be a normal person, or is he fated to become like his father - a remorseless pathological killer? And this conflict plays out in Lyga's novel with the onset of a series of gruesome murders in the town where Jasper lives and grew up. Jasper - wrestling with his tortured history and trying figuring out his identity - is determined to use his intimate knowledge of serial killers to help the police catch and stop the murderer.
The novel features many of the tropes of serial killer entertainment - some gruesome gore, a riveting battle of wits, an evil genius of a serial killer (ala Hannibal Lecter), and heart stopping danger and action. Oh, and the novel ends with a plot twist that sets up the novel for it's sure sequence, Game, which we also have.
I think one of the things that saddened me about this novel, is that Lyga is really a very talented writer. His plotting and dialog are very effective - and he is able to skillfully convey the ambiguity of self that confronts anyone trying to come to terms with his or her identity. But it ultimately feels sleazy and voyeuristic to me.
I do understand that people are fascinated with gruesome crimes and events - I'm not immune to it myself. There is a certain thrill of terror and relief to knowing what horrible things could and have happened - and yet that one has so far avoided. The world is definitely filled with horror and terror, but for myself, I'd rather read true histories or case studies, and wrestle with my own existential questions of "Why?" - instead of be taken though a fictional - supposedly entertaining - and at times manipulative account of murderers and murders.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Profoundly Disturbing
My Friend Dahmer by Derf Backderf
New York : Abrams ComicArts, 2012
221 p. : chiefly ill. ; 25 cm.
This is an excellent graphic novel - profound and disturbing. It revisits one of the most lurid serial killer stories - that of Jeffrey Dahmer - but manages to avoid being lurid or sensational at all. Instead it is a compassionate telling of the middle and high school years of the young Jeff Dahmer, told by Derf Backderf, a classmate and erstwhile pal of Dahmer.
The book presents a very honest portrait of the lives of young people in an Ohio community in the mid 1970s. Backderf is able to retell the rather low humor and insensitive world of high school guys he hangs out with - but with a deft and sensitive touch. He is also able to subtly convey the outrageous ways in which all the adults of Bath, Ohio ignore the clear signs that Dahmer was an extremely troubled young man - especially his intense alcohol abuse during school hours.
To me the greatest strength of this graphic novel is Backderf's ability to have compassion for Dahmer, and yet not excuse or minimize the horrid crimes that he committed. Within the telling of My Friend Dahmer, there is never a moment where one feels like Backderf is trying to forgive or excuse what Dahmer did. However, he is able help the reader consider Dahmer as a human being - one with a history in a real time and a very real place - albeit, one who eventually became a merciless and grotesque killer of over a dozen young men.
New York : Abrams ComicArts, 2012
221 p. : chiefly ill. ; 25 cm.
This is an excellent graphic novel - profound and disturbing. It revisits one of the most lurid serial killer stories - that of Jeffrey Dahmer - but manages to avoid being lurid or sensational at all. Instead it is a compassionate telling of the middle and high school years of the young Jeff Dahmer, told by Derf Backderf, a classmate and erstwhile pal of Dahmer.
The book presents a very honest portrait of the lives of young people in an Ohio community in the mid 1970s. Backderf is able to retell the rather low humor and insensitive world of high school guys he hangs out with - but with a deft and sensitive touch. He is also able to subtly convey the outrageous ways in which all the adults of Bath, Ohio ignore the clear signs that Dahmer was an extremely troubled young man - especially his intense alcohol abuse during school hours.
To me the greatest strength of this graphic novel is Backderf's ability to have compassion for Dahmer, and yet not excuse or minimize the horrid crimes that he committed. Within the telling of My Friend Dahmer, there is never a moment where one feels like Backderf is trying to forgive or excuse what Dahmer did. However, he is able help the reader consider Dahmer as a human being - one with a history in a real time and a very real place - albeit, one who eventually became a merciless and grotesque killer of over a dozen young men.
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