My forgotten book for
today is a rarity – a lost book that has just resurfaced and been published for
the very first time, 76 years after it was written. The Pursued is the third
crime novel C.S.Forester wrote before he turned his attention away from the
genre.
His crime debut,
Payment Deferred, is a bleak
masterpiece, and Forester really could write – anyone who dismisses him because
he is best known for his naval tales about Horatio Hornblower is making a
mistake, in my opinion. In The Pursued, he evokes the desperate gentility of suburban
life between the wars with great skill, and his characterisation is excellent.
Marjorie Grainger
returns home one night to find that her sister Dot has gassed herself. At
least, the inquest verdict is suicide, but it turns out Dot was pregnant, and
Marjorie begins to fear that her randy, aggressive husband Ted was responsible
for both the pregnancy and the death. But Marjorie is a weak woman in many
ways, unwilling to act. Very different is her mother, Mrs Clair, who embarks on
a relentless yet ultimately incoherent plan to achieve revenge....
This is a terrific
read, with elements drawn from true crime cases, including the Crippen story. I
did feel that the latter stages of the novel were rather hurried, as though
Forester wanted to get back to his naval stories. But I really enjoyed The
Pursued and to my mind it’s a milestone in the genre’s history. Thank goodness
the manuscript, lost for so many years, finally turned up.
5 comments:
Martin - Trust you to find such a fascinating story. I'm definitely intrigued!
I'm a huge C. S. Forester fan and I have a copy of this book but haven't read it yet. Time to correct that! Thanks for the fine review!
I received an email from Penguin notifying me this was available for purchase last week but had to wait until today to order it. Looking forward to getting my own copy and reading it. Don't know why it's not for sale in the US. Frustrating.
Thanks - I'm pretty confident in this recommendation. The writing has worn really well.
This author sounds quite interesting. I've written this book down to try to find it. Thanks
Post a Comment