The Darwin Affair Submitted by David Maschwitz Redhead by the Side of the Road Submitted by Greta Michaels
religious communities. Some are persuaded by Darwin’s evidence for natural selection and the evolution of species. Others think his theories are rubbish and even heretical. Particularly disturbing for them is the notion that humans descended from apes and the implication that all people have equal stature regardless of class.
As Inspector Field probes deeper into his perceived conspiracy, he meets resistance from his boss (no surprise there). He endures humiliation, physical injury, and repeated trials and tribulations in his search for the killer and his sponsors. It becomes clear to him that it is not the Queen they want to kill, but Prince Albert. Albert’s strong support for the natural sciences, including Darwin’s theories, not to mention his egalitarian political views, is seen as a threat to some in high places. A butcher’s apprentice, Decimus Cobb, is a self-taught surgical genius who achieves extraordinary skills with a scalpel. He wins the respect and admiration of the formally trained surgeons at St. Thomas Hospital. Unfortunately, Mr. Cobb has a propensity for using his amazing skills to kill people and satisfy his fetishes. He brazenly leaves a calling card with each victim by removing their left ear, very expertly of course. He must be stopped before he gets to the Prince. This is Tim Mason’s first novel, and he delivers a compelling, hard-to-put-down mystery. He seamlessly mixes real historical figures and events with fiction. The story is bloody, gruesome, and a little sad as people you come to care about are killed off. It is beautifully written in the language of nineteenth-century England with occasional bits of wry humor. I highly recommend it. - David Maschwitz Redhead by the Side of the Road by Anne Tyler The latest of twenty-three novels published by Anne Tyler is a recent addition to our library. Like her earlier novels, Redhead by the Side of the Road focuses primarily on character and family relationships as they change. Realistic details make the reader feel present in the character’s life. Micah Mortimer, the Tech Hermit, is a compulsively well-organized man of forty-three. He adheres to a daily schedule of run, shower, meals, evenings of spider solitaire and beer before the TV. He lives in the basement apartment of the building he manages on a weekly schedule of raking and emptying trash and consults about computers for clients who telephone. Of course, the comfortable routine is upset: first a young man who thinks Micah may be his biological father appears; then Cass, Micah’s woman friend, a fourth-grade teacher, seems about to lose her apartment. Who the “redhead” is, is left for the reader. Tyler has won many awards: She was awarded the National Book Critics Award for fiction in 1985. A Spool of Blue Thread was short-listed for the Mann Booker Prize in 2015. Redhead by the Side of the Road is on this year’s long list for the Mann Booker. Our Library has eight Anne Tyler novels in addition to the prize winners. Some critics have declared her works too “cute” and her male characters too “wimpy.” I have always found her books absorbing and diverting. In these days of pandemic isolation, that’s a recommendation. - Greta Michaels Originally published in the October 2020 issue of the 1666 Coffman Newsletter Comments are closed.
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