The angel of darkness

Caleb Carr, 1955-

Book - 1997

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FICTION/Carr, Caleb
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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House 1997.
Language
English
Main Author
Caleb Carr, 1955- (-)
Item Description
Published in paperback (with different pagination) by Ballantine Books in 1998.
Physical Description
629 p.
ISBN
9780345427632
9780679435327
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

It's a New York City summer in 1897, and the characters featured in Carr's surprise best-seller The Alienist (1994) reunite to solve another crime. What initially is a simple kidnapping case transmogrifies into infanticide, serial killings, psychologizing, forensics, a trial, an escape, international intrigue, and street-level gang warfare. All this emanates from a woman who, as it turns out, has a pretty poor record at keeping alive babies in her charge. How could a single gal from upstate be the cause of such baroque developments? The answer again requires the services of the alienist (psychiatrist), Dr. Kreizler, plus the talents of his former associates, private eye Sara Howard, bibulous Times reporter John Moore, Kreizler's teenage factotum Stevie Taggert (also the narrator), and ultimately navy boss Theodore Roosevelt. Their chase kicks off with a sketch of the kidnapper, who conked the wife of a Spanish diplomat and stole her baby. Then "an amazing set of coincidences," as young Taggert rightly describes Carr's plot devices, enables the sleuths to identify the malefactor, a shapely flirt named Libby. Taggert, though, needn't have apologized: readers revel in the atmospherics Carr evokes, especially the mood of danger. There is always a shadow on the street corner, a knife impaled in the doorway, a drunk in the gutter--the rich descriptions create a constant sense of unease. So none of Carr's fans will carp about the flimsy reason for the novel's abrupt shift upstate to Saratoga spa country, where the bucolic surroundings belie Libby's deadly past, where a well-dramatized trial scene stars Clarence Darrow, and where Libby adds two new corpses to her record before escaping back to Manhattan for the wild finale. Absorbing entertainment. --Gilbert Taylor

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The multitudes who enjoyed The Alienist are in for a surprise when they open this comfortable sequel to that mega-seller. Gone is the crisp, educated narration of New York Times reporter James Moore, replaced by the hotter, more ragged tones of former street urchin Stevie, a relatively minor figure in the first novel. That's a bold move on Carr's part‘Conan Doyle never replaced Watson‘but not too bold, as it cuts staleness. Otherwise, the novel retreads its predecessor's prowl through Olde New York and resurrects its catchy crime-busting crew of alienist Laszlo Kreizler and his carefully typecast assistants, as well as a flurry of historical figures (Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Teddy Roosevelt, et al.) whose appearances again blend into the action like stones into cake batter. Why tinker with success? Carr doesn't really, though for variety's sake he takes Kreizler and company upstate for a spell as they gather evidence against the monstrous Libby Hatch, a serial killer whose kidnapping of an infant gets Kreizler on her trail and smack up against society's sentiments about the sanctity of women. Carr also offers some courtroom dramatics as Libby is put on trial, defended by Clarence Darrow. Like The Alienist, this is a talky thriller, paced less by its bursts of violence (culminating in the U.S. Navy invading Greenwich Village) than by its broodings‘psychological, moral, legal‘about the roots of evil. To experience it is to plunge into a meticulously reconstructed past where ideas count and where the principals take their time exploring them. Just so, readers will want to take their time exploring Carr's cleverly crafted sequel, a novel whose myriad pleasures exude the essence of intelligent leisure reading. 250,000 first printing; major ad/promo; author tour. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Dr. Lazlo Kreizler, protagonist of The Alienist (LJ 3/1/94), is back with his idiosyncratic companions in Carr's latest mystery thriller. Set in 1897 New York and told through the voice of the doctor's young ward, Stevie (a former "delinquent" nicknamed "Stevepipe," after his weapon of choice), the story centers on the kidnapping of the baby daughter of a Spanish diplomat just as tensions between Spain and the United States have reached the boiling point. Soon our investigators discover something even more sinister: Their chief suspect seems to have been involved in the murders of several other young children‘including two of her own‘and to be willing to take any measures necessary to cover her tracks. It becomes a race against time to save this latest victim. The exciting tale is full of the requisite twists and turns and involves such historical figures as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Clarence Darrow, and Teddy Roosevelt. It also makes the point that when it comes to questions of good and evil and the motivations behind seemingly horrific behavior (à la Susan Smith), there are no simple answers. Highly recommended for all public libraries and any others where good mystery writing is in demand. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 5/1/97.]‘David W. Henderson, Eckerd Coll. Lib., St. Petersburg, Fla. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An absorbing if overlong sequel to Carr's popular 1994 thriller, The Alienist. As in that novel, the figures of ``alienist'' (i.e., psychologist) Dr. Laszlo Kreizler, investigative journalist John Schuyler Moore, and Kreizler's assistant Stevie ``Stevepipe'' Taggert (who tells the story) figure prominently in the investigation of a peculiarly dastardly crime. The year is 1897, and Carr's plot is initiated by the kidnapping of a Spanish diplomat's baby--then thickens, quite pleasurably, as suspicion falls on Elspeth Hunter, a malevolent nurse who is actually Libby Hatch, a malevolent gang moll and the suspected murderess of her own children. The pursuit, capture, and attempted conviction of Libby involve such notable historical figures as painter Albert Pinkham Ryder, women's-rights crusader Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Libby's defense attorney Clarence Darrow (who dominates a fascinating extended courtroom scene), and (back also from The Alienist) New York City Police Commissioner Theodore Roosevelt, who commandeers the US Navy to aid in the story's climactic pursuit. Carr overloads his tale with digressive comments on ever-worsening political relations between the US and Cuba (though one can argue such passages' relevance to the novel's initial mystery), and disastrously slows down the otherwise absorbing courtroom scenes by including needless detailed summaries of cases of child murder offered as precedents. But these are minor blemishes. Carr has learned to plot since The Alienist, and this novel usually moves at a satisfyingly rapid pace. The ambiance is convincingly thick and period-flavorful, the murderous details satisfyingly gruesome, and even the somewhat shaky central ethical question--whether ``a woman's murdering her own kids . . . could actually be looked at as her trying to gain control over her life and her world''--is quite convincingly presented. As for the nefarious Libby--presented, with perfect appropriateness, only as others see and hear her--she rivals Lydia Gwilt of Wilkie Collins's Armadale as the pluperfect villainess, and the centerpiece of an enormously entertaining and satisfying reading experience. (Author tour)

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.