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The Midnight Band of Mercy
The Midnight Band of Mercy
Author: Michael Blaine
"Engaging. . . . The 19th-century local color makes a good mystery even more enjoyable."-Publishers Weekly "A hell of a yarn that moves with the velocity of a newspaperman on a hot story." -Michael Connelly "Absorbing . . . puts modern-day urban scandals into perspective."-The New York Times Book Review "Fabulous."-The Charlotte...  more » "A superb mystery."-Mystery News "Delightful. . . . This is the bawdy, seamy, ripe-for-reform Gotham City no reader would want to live in-The crooks! The corsets!-but any reader would enjoy visiting."-Detroit Free Press "A gritty and fascinating glimpse of New York in the late 19th century."-San Francisco Chronicle "Blaine is a wonderful tour guide of old New York."-The Washington Post Book World New York, 1893. Max Greengrass is an ex-pugilist turned space-rater for the New York Herald-he's paid by the column inch. With no regular salary, Max must hustle for his stories. After a lucky night at the faro table, he nearly trips over his big scoop: four cats, killed and ritually arranged on a Greenwich Village sidewalk. Catricide! Max sells the story and pursues it, from low dives to posh mansions; from a proper, if eccentric, organization of respectable ladies, who are killing stray cats to "save" them; to a bizarre conspiracy of tenement landlords and insurance interests who are getting rich by exploiting the misery of the poorer elements of society. At the heart of The Midnight Band of Mercy is a story too strange to be true, except most of it is. Based on actual events-actual crimes-that occurred in New York City in 1893, Michael Blaine's brilliant historical novel re-creates an age when American belief in scientific progress led to the slaughter of innocents.
ISBN-13: 9781569474020
ISBN-10: 1569474028
Publication Date: 9/2005
Pages: 384
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 2

3.3 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Soho Press
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
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From Publishers Weekly
Max Greengrass, the hero of this engaging mystery by Blaine (The Desperate Season), has much in common with David Liss's hero Benjamin Weaver. Both are Jews in a world of gentiles: for Weaver, it's 18th-century London, for Greengrass, the sidewalks and saloons of lower Manhattan in 1893. Both are ex-prize fighters, as well as amateur detectives, whose murder investigations take place against a background of real and imagined events and uncover plots surprisingly sinister and far-reaching. Max is a young freelance reporter ("a space-rater") at the New York Herald, and his future hangs on getting a good story. When he finds four dead cats arranged in a row on a Greenwich Village sidewalk, and soon learns of more murdered felines, he's got a good scoop. After the Herald publishes his catricide story, Greengrass continues to nose around. When his most promising lead turns up dead, as does a witness to that murder, Greengrass's widening investigations introduce the reporterand the readerto a colorful mix of real and fictional politicians, religious figures, reformers, journalists and power brokers. Blaine's portrait of Manhattan in 1893 is striking both for what doesn't exist yet (sanitation, most graphically) and what does: Pete's Tavern on Irving Place, expensive dinners at the Waldorf, the Staten Island Ferry, Bellevue Hospital. The 19th-century local color makes a good mystery even more enjoyable.
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