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The Count and the Confession: A True Mystery [Hardcover]

John Taylor (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 21, 2002
Do you believe that the gentlest and
most courteous person you know
is capable of murder?


The count in John Taylor’s beguiling true story is Roger de la Burde, a wealthy scientist and art collector, who wore ascots, claimed he was a Polish nobleman, bowed to women—and then routinely propositioned them. In 1992, Burde was found dead on his Virginia estate, with a single bullet wound in his forehead. The Count and the Confession explores the layers of mystery surrounding this strange man’s death. Did he, as the local deputies at first assumed, commit suicide? Or had he, as a state police investigator later decided, been killed? And if so, by whom? The longtime girlfriend? The pregnant mistress? A cuckolded husband? A disgruntled business associate?
At the center of this mystery is Beverly Monroe, who becomes the lead suspect in Burde’s death. Monroe is an improbable murderer. Burde’s companion for twelve years—he called her “Mouse”—she is an unfailingly genteel Southern lady, affluent, highly educated, and a mother of three children—and prior to her indictment, she had never even received a parking ticket. But Monroe did have an apparent motive. She was also the last person to see Burde alive. And in a controversial interview with an ingeniously manipulative state police investigator, she changed her initial story and said that she had been present when Burde killed himself.
Critically acclaimed author John Taylor’s recon-struction of this riveting case is narrative nonfiction at its best. Meticulously reported, artfully written, rich in psychological complexity, Gothic detail, and dramatic suspense, The Count and the Confession will make you marvel at the peculiarities of human motivation and force you to grapple with an array of irresistible questions, the most dramatic being Did she or didn’t she?


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Seasoned journalist Taylor explored financial wheelings and dealings in Circus of Ambition and earned praise for Falling, an eloquent memoir of his doomed marriage. A similar intimacy and flair for intrigue pervade this account of the trial and conviction of Beverly Monroe for the shooting death of her boyfriend, an ersatz Polish count. Monroe made an unlikely murder suspect a gracious and loving mother of three, she was a patents analyst at Philip Morris but when tobacco research chemist Roger Zygmunt de la Burde was found dead on his 220-acre Virginia estate, police didn't think it was a suicide. Grief-stricken over her lover's death and unaware she was a suspect, Monroe, Taylor writes, was subjected to manipulative police procedures and eventually "persuaded to produce a false memory because she'd been convinced she had a repressed memory." But besides her confession (later retracted), other evidence incriminated her: there was another woman pregnant with Burde's child; the woman wanted Burde to leave Monroe; and the woman's ex-husband had reported Burde to the FBI for trafficking in fraudulent art. Monroe's daughter Katie, a lawyer, has dedicated years to ongoing appeals, and Taylor has spent considerable time unraveling complex entanglements: he interviewed Monroe and others extensively, reviewed 15,000 pages of legal documents and attended court proceedings. The result is a searing portrait of lives altered and destroyed, of violated rights and a labyrinthine and inflexible legal system and, ultimately, a story that remains an "irreducible mystery." Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Did Southern belle Beverly Monroe's boyfriend, a spurious Polish count, really commit suicide? Or was it murder? Maybe acclaimed journalist Taylor really knows.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Random House; 1st edition (May 21, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375505385
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375505386
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,084,942 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.9 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars terrific true story, September 7, 2002
This review is from: The Count and the Confession: A True Mystery (Hardcover)
Murder mysteries, both fiction and non-fiction, are generally driven by one of three questions, or by some combination thereof : (1) Who done it?; (2) How'd they do it?; and/or (3) Why'd they do it? One of the things that makes John Taylor's The Count and the Confession so engaging is that the true-life crime at its core not only involves all three of these questions but, remarkably enough, a rarely asked fourth question : Was there even a murder? There's certainly a body. In 1992, Roger de la Burde--a thoroughgoing scoundrel, though he styled himself a Polish count--was found dead in his locked Powhatan County, Virginia house with a single gunshot wound to the head and the proverbial smoking gun in his hand. To all appearances it was a case of suicide, but eventually his lover of thirteen years, Beverly Monroe, would be convicted of his murder, a verdict aided greatly by Ms Monroe's own confession that she was present when the gun fired.

Over the course of the book, as Mr. Taylor walks back the cat on this case, two elements emerge as the keys to what may well have been a miscarriage of justice. First he explores the deplorable character of Roger de la Burde, who in addition to not actually being a count was also a serial womanizer--having left his wife for Ms Monroe and having impregnated another woman at the time of his death, among his many sexual exploits--and a dealer in bogus artworks. He was also mired in a lawsuit with his former employer, Phillip Morris, which seems to have been a groundless attempt to extort money from them. He was also extraordinarily manipulative. One of the of the highlights of the book is his will, which is a model of self-absorption, judgmentalism, and how not to treat your daughters. All of this makes him pretty entertaining to read about but it's surpassing hard to mind that he's dead, whether by his own hand or at that of another.

Meanwhile, Beverly Monroe captivates us because on the one hand she seems reasonably pulled together, well-educated, financially independent, seemingly a good mom. But on the other, she tolerated de la Burde's shenanigans, including knowing that he was trying to have a "male heir" by just about any woman who was willing, and she made that confession. And that's the second element that Mr. Taylor focuses on : why would beverly Monroe confess to being there when de la Burde died if she wasn't?

It is here that a sort of villain emerges, David Riley, chief investigator for the county. Riley determined to his own satisfaction that the position in which de la Burde was lying and the way he was holding the gun indicated not suicide but murder and he settled upon Beverly Monroe as the culprit. He then used a variety of techniques, from a lie detector test that he informed her she'd failed to commiserating about how badly de la Burde had treated her to threats about how the prosecution might portray her to an oft repeated, nearly hypnotic suggestion that, even if she didn't kill him, she must have been there when de la Burde died. When she accepted this last scenario and made it her own, it enabled the state to portray her as a murderess once they used forensic evidence to rule out suicide.

As Mr. Taylor shows though, and as her lawyers were able to show on appeal, it seems unlikely that she was in the room at the time and there is significant reason to doubt the evidence that the state purported to show that de la Burde did not fire the shot that killed him. In fact, Ms Monroe's appeal was eventually successful and she has been released from prison pending further appeal by the state. However, even if we accept that she did not kill de la Burde--and the author, though he does not slip into advocacy does make it hard for us to believe anything other than that it was a suicide--in the end, we come back to the central mysteries : the count and the confession.

Towards the end of the book Mr. Taylor recounts a moment where Beverly Monroe's original attorney, Murray Janus, is reflecting on the reasons he lost at trial :

After all these years, Janus still could not believe that Beverly had given those statements to Dave Riley. They were tantamount to a confession.
Why she did it was truly a mystery, second only to the mystery of how Roger de la Burde had died.

That this moment comes so late in the proceedings and that even then we join in Janus's wonderment at these two mysteries, suggests why Mr. Taylor's story works so well. For by then we kind of know the answer to two of those classic murder mystery questions. We know why someone would have killed de la Burde and we know how it might have been done (a jury bought it anyway). But we still don't know who killed Roger de la Burde and we really have to doubt that anyone did. It seems a simple case of suicide gone horribly wrong in the hands of an overzealous investigator. And Beverly Monroe seems to have been, as she was so often and maddeningly during his life, a victim of de la Burde's misbehavior and her own malleability. But if her continual acquiescence in that misbehavior makes her somewhat unsympathetic early on in the tale--just as it makes him wholly unsympathetic--then the grace with which she handles the conviction and the determination with which she and even more so her daughter, Katie, fight the appeal serve to redeem her. Even if you're ambivalent about her at first, as I have to admit I was, you'll be rooting for Beverly Monroe by the end.

GRADE : A-

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars DID SHE DO IT?.....OR DIDN'T SHE?, April 10, 2003
By 
Brady Buchanan (Henderson, NV United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Count and the Confession: A True Mystery (Hardcover)
It's not difficult to know who really killed the subject early on, but to quote a sentence in the book, "It also said the courts were a crapshoot." This true crime story is a good one. An individual who critiqued this story stated there was too much detail. I thought the detail was necessary as the story progressed; it was essential! Beverly Monroe, a PhD, an accused and convicted murderer, has a story of great interest. On the State's side you have the motivation to find the guilty person and the details of dastardly deeds, and on the Defense side, you have the myriad of motions and just plain work to try to prove innocence. What a spider's web this story becomes. A fine read worth 5 stars.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Did she or didn't she?, August 29, 2003
Did southern lady, mild-mannered and genteel Beverly Monroe, murder her lover, wealthy art collector and scientist Roger De la Burde? John Taylor's account leaves the question open. In fact, you are given a website when you can register your own verdict on the matter.

Long-time journalist Taylor has given us a workmanship write-up of this intriguing case. Beverly is characterized in depth, as is De la Burde, and his pregnant Polish mistress, and even Beverly's two daughters and son. One idea he expresses will leap out at you: How much has feminism really accomplished, how deep has been the impact of women's liberation, when two highly educated and accomplished women still become obsessed over a man?

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
What do you take to prison? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
baby agreement, residue report, primer residue, gun upside, habeas petition, police secretaries, commonwealth attorney, firearms expert, prosecutorial misconduct, gunpowder residue, ineffective assistance, sentence reduction, appeal bond, fifth fingers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Von Schuch, Beverly Monroe, Philip Morris, Murray Janus, Dave Riley, Roger de la Burde, Zelma Smith, Jack Lewis, Krystyna Drewnowska, Greg Neal, Don Lee, Joe Hairfield, Powhatan County, Steve Northup, Ann Jones, Drewry's Bluff, Barbara Samuels, Peter Greenspun, New York, Sheldon Gosline, Chesterfield County, Hazel Bunch, Katie Monroe, David Hicks, Major Hill
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