A Wild Surge of Guilty Passion
A Novel
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
From the acclaimed author of Atticus and Mariette in Ecstasy comes a stylish novel set in the hard-drinking, fast-living New York City of the Jazz Age that follows two lovers in a torrid affair on an arc of murder and sexual self-destruction.
Based on a real case whose lurid details scandalized Americans in 1927 and sold millions of newspapers, acclaimed novelist Ron Hansen’s latest work is a tour de force of erotic tension and looming violence. Trapped in a loveless marriage, Ruth Snyder is a voluptuous, reckless, and altogether irresistible woman who wishes not only to escape her husband but that he die—and the sooner the better. No less miserable in his own tedious marriage is Judd Gray, a dapper corset-and-brassiere salesman who travels the Northeast peddling his wares. He meets Ruth in a Manhattan diner, and soon they are conducting a white-hot affair involving hotel rooms, secret letters, clandestine travels, and above all, Ruth’s increasing insistence that Judd kill her husband. Could he do it? Would he? What follows is a thrilling exposition of a murder plan, a police investigation, the lovers’ attempt to escape prosecution, and a final reckoning for both of them that lays bare the horror and sorrow of what they have done. Dazzlingly well-written and artfully constructed, this impossible-to-put-down story marks the return of an American master known for his elegant and vivid novels that cut cleanly to the essence of the human heart, always and at once mysterious and filled with desire.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Hansen has built a formidable career out of reinvigorating historical episodes with accomplished fiction (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford), but this lurid 1920s noir procedural lacks the pop and crackle of his better works. The clumsy murder of Ruth Snyder's husband by her lover, hosiery salesman Judd Gray, is immediately solved by the police, plunging the book into a lengthy flashback of the affair leading up to the crime but the real violence is done to history. Frequent interjections inform the reader that, for instance, Scott Fitzgerald coined the phrase "the Jazz Age" and that Babe Ruth played for the Yankees, or pointlessly trot out D.W. Griffith, the Ziegfeld Follies, and the temperance movement in what quickly becomes an annoying caricature of old timeyness. The chapters concerning Gray and Snyder's trial and the media frenzy surrounding it are more representative of Hansen's talents, but they alone aren't enough to salvage this misdirected effort. The real-life case of the couple and the readiness with which they betrayed one another has inspired other films and novels (most notably James M. Cain's Double Indemnity), but this ripped-from-the-archives feels deflated and stale.
Customer Reviews
A wild surge of guilty passion
A great read, wonderfully written with good prose and description. A frivolous, comical, yet somber romp through the roaring twenties!