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(Hardcover)
Following in the footsteps of the highly acclaimed novel The Gentle Axe, featuring the detective Porfiry Petrovich in another atmospheric and gripping slice of nineteenth-century Russia
It's the middle of a hot, dusty St. Petersburg summer in the late 1860s. A doctor brings home a fancy box of chocolates for his wife and sona strange gift on a sweltering Saturday afternoon. Within an hour, both mother and child die an excruciating death, and the doctor is immediately arrested, suspected of poisoning. As investigator Porfiry Petrovich concedes, in such cases the obvious solution often turns out to be the correct solution. And in the city's steamy, oppressive atmosphere, even he lacks the energy to delve any deeper.
But when further, apparently unconnected, murders occur on the other side of town, a subtle and surprising pattern starts to emerge. Porfiry is forced to reassess his assumptions and follow a tenuous, uncertain trail that takes him into the hidden, squalid heart of the city and brings him face-to-face with incomprehensible horror and cruelty. A Vengeful Longing is a taut, enthralling mystery, a vivid and utterly unforgettable rendering of a brutal and stifling nineteenth- century St. Petersburg.
Set in St. Petersburg in 1868, Morris's superb second novel to feature Porfiry Petrovich (after The Gentle Axe) puts the detective borrowed from Dostoyevski's Crime and Punishment on the trail of a series of vile murders. When the wife and son of a doctor die after consuming a box of chocolates at their dacha, the obvious suspect is the morphine-addicted doctor. Then a shooting and a stabbing lead Petrovich elsewhere-to an elegant confectioner's full of pastries and possible revolutionaries as well as to the city's underworld. As Petrovich breaks in a new detective, the aptly named Pavel Virginsky, he introduces colleague and reader alike to the Russian capital and to the ills of the entire society. Morris captures this world with expert strokes, never content to merely peddle exotica, but making sure that his characters spring convincingly from their setting. While the person behind the crimes is a little unlikely, this novel stands out from a number of fine czarist-era mysteries-by Russians and foreigners alike-like a Fabergé egg at a yard sale. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. More Reviews and RecommendationsR. N. Morris was born in Manchester in 1960 and now lives in North London with his wife and two children. He sold his first short story to a teenage girls' magazine while still a student at Cambridge University, where he read classics. Making his living as a freelance copywriter, he has continued to write, and occasionally publish, fiction. One of his stories, "The Devil's Drum," was turned into a one-act opera, which was performed at the Purcell Room in London's South Bank. Another, "Revenants," was published as a comic book.
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July 01, 2008: R.N. Morris continues to captivate Dostoyevsky's Detective Magistrate Porfiry Petrovich 'Crime and Punishment' career in St. Peterburg. In the 'Gentle Ax' I was amazed Morris pulled it off without ruining the original incarnation. To pull it off, as Morris has in 'A Vengeful Longing', is simply astounding. Morris doesn't just tell us another story about Petrovich. He builds on him. After reading Morris' take on Petrovich, it was immense fun to reread 'Crime and Punishment'
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May 11, 2008: It was with trepidation that I started on R. N. Morris' book. After all, his hero is borrowed from Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime And Punishment, which I endured with gritted teeth as a literature undergraduate. But Morris' take on investigating magistrate Porfiry Petrovich is surprisingly readable, and his portrait of the seedier side of 1860s St Petersburg, sweltering in the heat of summer, is rather entertaining. Petrovich, the dogged antagonist to Dostoyevsky's angsty protagonist Raskolnikov, is drolly weary here. Exasperated by poor sanitation in the city, tormented by his haemorrhoids and smoking endless cigarettes, he is hot on the trail of two seemingly open-and-shut cases. A suburban wife and her handicapped son die horribly after ingesting poisoned chocolates and a philandering soldier is shot dead by, apparently, an avenging father. The fun here is not so much thw whodunnit but the colourful cast of characters and the vivid vignettes of a Tsarist city conjured by Morris. In fact, hardcore murder mystery fans might be a tad exasperated by the ambling pace of the investigation. But for readers looking for a literary jaunt with better than average style and sass, this detour delivers a fairly scenic route.