Slaves of Obsession by Anne Perry

Anne Perry is the author of many bestselling mysteries set in Victorian London.

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Slaves of Obsession by Anne Perry


Features

  • Mass Market Paperback: 368 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.04 x 6.91 x 4.20
  • Publisher: Fawcett Books; (October 2, 2001)
  • ISBN: 0449005925


    Amazon.com
    Slaves of Obsession moves from Victorian England to the United States on the brink of the Civil War, evoking not only the nuances of the English class system but also the fierce passions and partisan loyalties that ignited the bloodiest conflagration in American history. When Daniel Alberton, a well-born arms merchant, asks private enquiry agent William Monk to investigate an extortion attempt, the former policeman is thrust into a conflict between competing Americans, Lyman Breeland and Philo Trace, who have come to London to purchase guns for the Union and Confederacy forces respectively. Bound by honor to complete the sale of a trove of weapons he has promised to Trace, Alberton refuses Breeland's plea to change his mind. Breeland is championed by Merrit, Alberton's 16-year-old daughter, who makes an impassioned argument for the anti-slavery position. Then Alberton is brutally murdered and the arms shipment stolen, and Merrit elopes with Breeland. Monk and his wife Hester are dispatched to America to retrieve the young woman and bring her seducer back to England to face a murder trial. Hester, who was a nurse in the Crimea, comports herself admirably on the battlefield at Manassas while Monk searches for Breeland and arrests him amidst the carnage. But once back in England, Monk's investigative efforts cast doubt on Breeland's guilt and point to a killer closer to home.

    Hester Monk emerges as a fascinating character in her own right. Her relationship with the enigmatic William, whose fragmented recollections (of who and what he was before the accident that erased most of his memory) still haunt him, is thoughtfully evoked. As usual, Perry handles the secondary characters with brio. Breeland, in particular, becomes in the author's capable hands a man whose obsessive devotion to the Union cause underscores his inability to return Merrit's love. As Hester tells the infatuated young woman, "To see the mass and lose the individual is not nobility. You are confusing emotional cowardice with honour.... To follow your duty when the cost in friendship is high, or even the cost in love, is a greater vision, of course. But to retreat from personal involvement, from gentleness and the giving of yourself, and choose instead the heroics of a general cause, no matter how fine, is cowardice." This sixth entry in the Monk series evokes the era in which it is set with a fine eye for details of dress, manners, décor, and culture, while skillfully unfolding the emotional and intellectual depths of both William and Hester, whose well-honed intelligence makes it clear that she, too, deserves a series of her own. --Jane Adams --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    Book Description
    Three Cassettes, 5 hours
    Read by Simon Jones

    The year is 1861. The American Civil War has just begun, and London arms dealer Daniel Albertson is becoming a very wealthy man as emissaries from both sides of the conflict rush to purchase his wares. The quiet dinner party held by Albertson and his beautiful wife seems remote indeed from the passions rending America. Yet investigator William Monk and his bride, Hester, sense growing tensions and barely concealed violence in this well-appointed mansion. For two of the guests are Americans, each vying to buy Albertson's armaments.

    Philo Trace, the Southerner, is both charming and intelligent, but a defender of slavery. Northerner Lyman Breelove is a disturbing blend of political zealot and personal reserve--to whom Albertson's teenage daughter has pledged her heart. Soon Monk and Hester's forebodings are fulfilled. For within this group, one is brutally murdered in a cruel ritualistic fashion, and two others disappear--along with Albertson's entire inventory of weapons.

    Slaves of Obsession twists and turns like a powder keg fuse as Monk and Hester track the man they believe to be a cold-blooded murderer all the way to Washington D.C. and the bloody battlefield at Manassas. Yet finally, in a hushed London courtroom scene, Anne Perry holds her readers breathless and spellbound while Sir Oliver Rathbone fights to defend the innocent . . . and perhaps the guilty . . . from the hangman's noose.
    --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


    Reader Reviews
    My first "go" at the William Monk series, August 22, 2003 Reviewer: gordon fuglie from Los Angeles, CA United States While shelf-browsing my local library, I happened open this book and was intrigued by its attractive cover and its historical premise, so I picked it up. I, too, could not finish the book and stopped short of the trial in London. It opened fairly well with the moral issue of slavery becoming a heated topic at a London merchant's dinner table. The 16-year old daughter is indignant that her father is selling efficiently lethal rifles and ammunition to the Confederacy. Her passion has been influenced by a rival Union arms buyer who pleads the moral case as well, and with whom she later flees to the U.S. I found the characters convincing one moment, and then rather wooden the next. The same with the Victorian milieu -- it struck me as unevenly depicted. For me this was a major flaw as the best historical novels and detective stories have an optimal weaving of story, character and environment to make the "whole cloth", so to speak. In addition, the detective Monk seemed a rather lame chap in this work. Mystery detectives, even when they're not doing much or are hovering in the background, ought to have a looming presence as they are to a greater or lesser degree the moral presence in the story, the one who must discover the truth. The Adam Dalgliesh character of P.D. James is almost always successfully rendered in this way, even though he may be absent for a good part of the story. What went wrong with SoO? Look at the author's extensive credits at the front of the book. Ms. Perry is a "writing machine" if there ever was one, and prolific genre writers can get overextended, disconnected and thin from time to time. That's what happened here, I wager. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title

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