Verdict of Twelve
British Library Crime Classics
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
July 15, 2017
This reprint of Postgate's celebrated 1940 debut, which examines the impact of individual jury members' lives and opinions on the outcome of a murder case, is the first entry in Poisoned Pen's British Library Crime Classics to actually live up to the series title.Rosalie van Beer stands accused of poisoning her nephew, 11-year-old Philip Arkwright, with some wicked stuff called hederin found in the ivy dust she allegedly sprinkled on his lunch. The case is compelling: Rosalie had never liked the boy; her own position in the Arkwright family, which she'd married into and been widowed from, had always been marginal; the mutual dislike festering between Philip and her had been dramatically escalated by her execution of his beloved pet rabbit; and his death will bring her a fortune. But Elizabeth and James Rodd, her housekeeper and gardener, would also benefit financially from Philip's death, though on a much smaller scale, and Sir Isambard Burns, her counsel, has learned some information he's convinced will be the basis for an effective defense. So far, so routine, though Postgate writes with a memorably acrid wit. The innovation here is a long opening section providing detailed portraits of the 12 jurors who'll decide the case, each of them with their own prejudices, quirks, and variously relevant back stories. Once they've heard the evidence and retired to the jury room to consider it, the actor among them considers the performances of the attorneys, the Oxford don wonders why he isn't the foreman, the Greek immigrant who is the foreman does his best to conduct everything as Englishly as possible, and the religious fundamentalist seeks divine guidance he can foist on the others. The results of Postgate's probing eye, by turns psychological and sociological, are richly and rewardingly ironic, right down to the indelibly understated final speech. A classic reprint you can't afford to miss.
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August 7, 2017
Rosalie van Beer disliked her 11-year-old nephew, Philip, who was in her charge, and went out of her way to torment him. But did she kill him? That’s for the jury to decide in this mystery, first published in 1940, by Postgate (1896–1971), a welcome entry in the British Library Crime Classics series. This extended portrait of an English murder trial peers into the psyches of the jurors—including an unsuspected murderer and a religious fanatic—from their swearing in, to the presenting of evidence, the eventual verdict, and an unexpected revelation in the last pages. The reader follows the events leading up to Philip’s death by poisoning, along with the people involved, such as the bumbling doctor, the nosy tutor, and the uncurious housekeeper. The prosecution and defense present their cases, and the jury retires to consider aspects of the evidence that would startle the court. The characters are well drawn, at times frighteningly so, and the ending is perversely satisfying.
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