The Wicked Boy: The Mystery of a Victorian Child Murderer
Autor Kate Summerscaleen Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 iul 2016
In the summer of 1895, Robert Coombes (age 13) and his brother Nattie (age 12) were seen spending lavishly around the docklands of East London -- for ten days in July, they ate out at coffee houses and took trips to the seaside and the theater. The boys told neighbors they had been left home alone while their mother visited family in Liverpool, but their aunt was suspicious. When she eventually she forced the brothers to open the house to her, she found the badly decomposed body of their mother in a bedroom upstairs. Robert and Nattie were arrested for matricide and sent for trial at the Old Bailey.
Robert confessed to having stabbed his mother, but his lawyers argued that he was insane. Nattie struck a plea and gave evidence against his brother. The court heard testimony about Robert's severe headaches, his fascination with violent criminals and his passion for 'penny dreadfuls', the pulp fiction of the day. He seemed to feel no remorse for what he had done, and neither the prosecution nor the defense could find a motive for the murder. The judge sentenced the thirteen-year-old to detention in Broadmoor, the most infamous criminal lunatic asylum in the land. Yet Broadmoor turned out to be the beginning of a new life for Robert--one that would have profoundly shocked anyone who thought they understood the Wicked Boy.
At a time of great tumult and uncertainty, Robert Coombes's case crystallized contemporary anxieties about the education of the working classes, the dangers of pulp fiction, and evolving theories of criminality, childhood, and insanity. With riveting detail and rich atmosphere, Kate Summerscale recreates this terrible crime and its aftermath, uncovering an extraordinary story of man's capacity to overcome the past."
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Specificații
Caracteristici
The Suspicions of Mr Whicher sold over 600,000 copies, was a number one bestseller, the winner of both the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction and the Galaxy British Book of the Year Award in 2008, and a Richard & Judy pick. Published in nineteen countries, it was also adapted into a major ITV drama in 2011, and a subsequent series.
Notă biografică
Kate Summerscale is the author of the number one bestselling The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, winner of the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction, the Galaxy British Book of the Year Award, a Richard & Judy Book Club pick and adapted into a major ITV drama. Her first book, the bestselling The Queen of Whale Cay, won a Somerset Maugham award and was shortlisted for the Whitbread biography award. Her third book, Mrs Robinson's Disgrace, was a Sunday Times bestseller. Kate Summerscale was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2010. She lives in London.
Recenzii
No other writer could have made the Coombes case so fascinating and so vivid ... It would be impossible to read this dry-eyed
An extraordinary book which will stay with you
Gripping... Summerscale is an exquisite storyteller. She is judicious in her use of detail, subtle in her unspoken connections between the past and the present.... This is the story of one wicked boy, but it is also a plea for compassion and empathy
For her latest forensic investigation into the throttled passions of Victorian family life, Summerscale has moved forward 35 years to 1895 and turned away from the provincial bourgeois home to the working-class terraces of London's East End ... [a] fine account ... subtle and confident
Unexpectedly touching... a fascinating account of a murder and its endless reverberations
As Kate Summerscale has proved before, she has a wonderfully sharp eye for stories which turn out not to be quite what they seem... a remarkably heartening story
Compelling... it gripped and stoked the national imagination, just as it surely will again
A work of social history that is as compassionate as it is absorbing... we almost feel we are wandering through these scenes ourselves
Ultimately, the narrative is an exploration of Victorian attitudes to juvenile crime, and this pacy slice of social history acts as both hawk-eyed prosecution and gentle defence
An absorbing account of fin-de-siecle Britain... [and] a powerful story about vulnerable and neglected children, both then and now
It's a fascinating story and Summerscale tells it beautifully... [Her] sympathetic and intelligent study is full of social interest too. I can't imagine that it could have been done better
The challenge, to which Ms Summerscale rises wonderfully well, is to sustain the reader's interest in him for the remaining 50-odd years of his life . Evocative . Through a mixture of serendipity and meticulous research, Ms Summerscale is able to add one final, heart-stopping twist
Redemption comes twice in this account . An extremely touching twist . Scrupulous and occasionally startling
Summerscale has performed a stunning post-mortem of "the horror" at number 35 . Talk about bringing history alive
It is above all her skill in creating a context for the crime which makes The Wicked Boy so readable . the sounds and smells of the East End docks, from which their father set sail, are evoked with particular vividness. More fascinating still are the ideas of the age ... An extraordinary tale of redemption
Her research is needle-sharp and her period detail richly atmospheric, but what is most heartening about this truly remarkable book is the story of real-life redemption that it brings to light
An extraordinary book which will stay with you
Gripping... Summerscale is an exquisite storyteller. She is judicious in her use of detail, subtle in her unspoken connections between the past and the present.... This is the story of one wicked boy, but it is also a plea for compassion and empathy
For her latest forensic investigation into the throttled passions of Victorian family life, Summerscale has moved forward 35 years to 1895 and turned away from the provincial bourgeois home to the working-class terraces of London's East End ... [a] fine account ... subtle and confident
Unexpectedly touching... a fascinating account of a murder and its endless reverberations
As Kate Summerscale has proved before, she has a wonderfully sharp eye for stories which turn out not to be quite what they seem... a remarkably heartening story
Compelling... it gripped and stoked the national imagination, just as it surely will again
A work of social history that is as compassionate as it is absorbing... we almost feel we are wandering through these scenes ourselves
Ultimately, the narrative is an exploration of Victorian attitudes to juvenile crime, and this pacy slice of social history acts as both hawk-eyed prosecution and gentle defence
An absorbing account of fin-de-siecle Britain... [and] a powerful story about vulnerable and neglected children, both then and now
It's a fascinating story and Summerscale tells it beautifully... [Her] sympathetic and intelligent study is full of social interest too. I can't imagine that it could have been done better
The challenge, to which Ms Summerscale rises wonderfully well, is to sustain the reader's interest in him for the remaining 50-odd years of his life . Evocative . Through a mixture of serendipity and meticulous research, Ms Summerscale is able to add one final, heart-stopping twist
Redemption comes twice in this account . An extremely touching twist . Scrupulous and occasionally startling
Summerscale has performed a stunning post-mortem of "the horror" at number 35 . Talk about bringing history alive
It is above all her skill in creating a context for the crime which makes The Wicked Boy so readable . the sounds and smells of the East End docks, from which their father set sail, are evoked with particular vividness. More fascinating still are the ideas of the age ... An extraordinary tale of redemption
Her research is needle-sharp and her period detail richly atmospheric, but what is most heartening about this truly remarkable book is the story of real-life redemption that it brings to light