Monday, June 24, 2019


Casey Cep: Furious Hours – Murder, Fraud and the Last Trial of Harper Lee,

W. Heinemann/ Random House UK, 9781785150746, paperback


 

“Furious Hours” is a fascinating mixture of a book:  true crime reporting  about the murders of an alleged serial killer, the Reverend Willie Maxwell, his very own murder, his  lawyer ‘s Big Tom Radney’s  role in this Alabama drama. And last but not least bibliographical reportage of Harper Lee’s life (the reclusive author of “To Kill a Mockingbird" and childhood friend of Truman Capote) unearthing the last known research activities for a book she saw but was unable to write after having spent years of research on  Reverend Maxwell.  

This book reads like a thriller but is also a portrait of Alabama, the South and a biography of Harper Lee’s peculiar life.  I would say it is beneficial to have an interest in the author Harper Lee as 25 % of the book is about her, her research of this case and her plight to write a second bestseller after the gigantic success of “To Kill a Mockingbird”. 

“Furious Hours” opens with the thriller element of the book.  Several relatives including two wives of the African- American Reverend Maxwell are found dead, all having died under suspicious circumstances.  Law enforcement treated Maxwell as a suspect but is unable to nail him to any of these deaths.  What turned him into a key suspect is the fact that he had taken out life insurance on all these people unbeknownst to them, something that could be done years ago, making him the sole beneficiary in case of death.  Reading about the investigations into these deaths, one is speechless that no one could pin Maxwell down to these murders despite him having more than one motive.  Enter Tom Radney, his lawyer and a gregarious Alabama politician who defended him brilliantly in all these trials.  When one of the grieving relatives takes justice into his own hands, Tom Radney switches roles without blinking an eye ending up defending Reverend Maxwell’s killer.  These chapters alone make this book a mind boggling read.

I had read Marja Mills book “The Mockingbird Next Door”  about her friendship with Harper Lee and her sisters  a few years ago and was astonished to learn from Casey Cep that there had indeed been the start of a second book for Lee, not counting her original version of the Mockingbird, “Go Set a Watchman”, which was originally dropped but published after her death. Harper Lee dug deep and painstakingly into the Reverend Maxwell’s case, spending years of interviewing people associated with him and even living in Alexander City for some time to conduct her investigation.  She amassed tons of material but after years of trying to write “The Reverend” as she called the work in progress, she gave up and the book never materialized.

Casey Cep has done some very extensive, deep digging herself to come up with this mesmerizing story.  Hats off to her, I was absolutely fascinated by her discoveries and the stories she had to tell.

Saturday, June 15, 2019


Kelleigh Greenberg-Jephcott: Swan Song, 9781473543935. Hutchinson/ Penguin Random House UK,paperback available July 2019: 9781786090188


No German edition currently (I hope rights have been sold to Germany)

Truman Capote, the literary genius, bad boy and chameleon of the 1950, 60 and 70ties, provided enough material for several novels during his excessive life.  I read Melanie Benjamin’s “The Swans of 5th Avenue” last year and had a blast with her gossipy, sparkling, entertaining novel.  When I heard of Kelleigh Greenberg-Jephcott’s novel “Swan Song” which was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2019, I just knew I had to read her version of Truman’s tragic relationship with his swans.

Both novels are excellent but different in their prose reimagining Truman Capotes life and that of his swans. “Swan Song” is the more extensive one with 480 pages and the more literary but just as juicy, gossipy and easy to read.  The author switches back and forth between Truman’s voice and that of his “swans” – the stunning grand dames of jet set society during their time:  Babe Paley, Slim Keith, C.Z. Guest, Gloria Guinness, Lee Radziwill and Marella Agnelli.  Their glamorous lives and friendships were shared with unimaginable luxuries, gossipy, boozy lunches in the eating temples of New York, dream like summer vacations on yachts  in the Aegean or Yucatan, Babe’s beautiful meticulously planned dinners and of course Lee’s access to the Kennedys and Onassis families.  Not to mention Truman's famous black and white ball which went into the history books.
They all revealed their most private thoughts and troubles to Truman who in return showered them with the love, attention and affection most of them lacked from their philandering, rich husbands.  He would never betray them unlike their husbands of that they were sure despite Truman’s increasing dependence on alcohol and pills which eventually lead to his ruin.  So what in the world made him betray their love and trust publishing a piece in Esquire with thinly vailed names based on his swan’s lives spilling the beans of their most intimate secrets? The chapters in the novel about the consequences of his actions are exquisite.  Greenberg-Jephcott is brilliant in imagining Truman’s and the swans’ emotional rollercoaster after him being banned from their lives, the years that followed after his betrayal and loss of their friendship, all closely based on biographical data.
“Swan Songs” transported me into a fascinating re-imagined world of a literary yet emotionally crippled genius and his court of beautiful, rich and unusual women. I loved it,   5 stars from me!