Thoughts on "The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher"
Posted: February 17th, 2010, 10:08 pm
One book I finally picked up after months of sidelong glances was The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher by British author Kate Summerscale. As I closed it the other night, I decided I was right: Another one I'd waited too long to read.
For all crime readers, fact and fiction alike, this absorbing, vivid and disturbing real-life whodunit is a must. Whicher is an account of one of the first major crimes of the modern industrial age: The cruel, vicious 1860 murder of a 3-year-old boy, Saville Kent, whose body was found at the bottom of the backyard privy of his family's Road Hill mansion. His throat had been cut.
Read more at http://www.redroom.com/blog/thomas-burc ... detectives
For all crime readers, fact and fiction alike, this absorbing, vivid and disturbing real-life whodunit is a must. Whicher is an account of one of the first major crimes of the modern industrial age: The cruel, vicious 1860 murder of a 3-year-old boy, Saville Kent, whose body was found at the bottom of the backyard privy of his family's Road Hill mansion. His throat had been cut.
Read more at http://www.redroom.com/blog/thomas-burc ... detectives