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The Deadhouse
Linda Fairstein
Little Brown, £9.99 |
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Reviewed by Ayo Onatade |
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The Deadhouse is a building both hauntingly and dramatically
beautiful. The old Smallpox Hospital sits on a small island off
Manhattan and provides a chilling background to Linda Fairstein's latest
book of the same name. It seems that many years ago the island was used
to keep New York's undesirables away from the rest of the city's
population. At one time or another prisoners, people who were destitute
and insane or victims of contagious diseases such as smallpox, were
restricted to institutions on the island.
It's the run up to Christmas in New York City and Lola Dakota (a rather
unfortunate choice of name!) has put up with a lot from her abusive
spouse Ivan Kralovic. She finally agrees to work with the New Jersey
District Attorney's office in order for him to be put behind bars once
and for all. Dakota until her demise was a brilliant and distinguished
professor of political science as well as being an acknowledged expert
on the history and politics of New York City. The police set up a sting
operation and Ivan is arrested when he pays the undercover police
officers after they show him a videotape of her "supposed"
death. Regrettably, Lola's body is found later that day in the elevator
shaft of her Manhattan apartment building. Even though the police
declare it a homicide Assistant District Attorney Alex Cooper thinks
otherwise. Things just do not add up. Having helped keep Lola safe from
Ivan over the last two years Cooper has acquired an insight into the
professor's secret and complex nature.
The late professor had a number of enemies and these included a number
of members of her own faculty. Moreover a note with the words "The
Deadhouse" is found in Lola's pocket. Cooper has not much to go on
apart from the note, but the link to foul play emerges when the picture
of a student Charlotte Voight (who disappeared earlier) is found pinned
on her notice board in her office. However, what did they both have to
do with the Deadhouse, the infamous Roosevelt Island site where smallpox
patients went to die in the 19th century? An added obstacle is the fact
that Lola was working on a historical project, an architectural dig on
the island. The late professor and her colleagues are using tools of
urban archaeology to unearth some of the island's secrets. Could this
work somehow be linked to her death? Cooper, working with detectives
Mike Chapman and Mercer Wallace, soon uncover a distressing pattern of
betrayal and terror as well as confronting unwilling suspects and
uncooperative university officials.
The Deadhouse wastes no time in gripping you and the author's
experience as a prosecutor of sex crimes resonates from the book. These
books has a lot of strengths, which can be seen from the line-up of
suspects to the other characters that may also have had a motivation
either for committing the murder, or for helping someone else cover it
up. It also raises some very interesting questions about the issues of
domestic abuse and how it is dealt with, especially some of the problems
inherent in the criminal justice system. It also showed how the district
attorney's office and the police department work closely together while
trying to find the perpetrator of a homicide. The ending kept me on a
knife-edge of suspense, the murderer was revealed, but not before Cooper
nearly loses her life. I only wish that she would do something about
that latent passion that is constantly simmering between Cooper and
Chapman. I am sure that Chapman would make a better boyfriend than some
of the earlier one's that Cooper has had.
This novel also brought to my attention facets of New York City that I
was unaware existed. I found The Deadhouse to be a particular
engrossing tale of modern-day murder mystery that also had a link with
yesterday's intriguing past. Furthermore, while the detail and apparent
realism that informs the reader of the business of being a sex crimes DA
is present, unlike the Scarpetta series one is not overwhelmed with
information.
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