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A Vengeful Longing: A Novel (St. Petersburg Mysteries) [Hardcover]

R. N. Morris (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

St. Petersburg Mysteries June 12, 2008
Following in the footsteps of the highly acclaimed novel The Gentle Axe, featuring the detective Porfiry Petrovich in another atmospheric and gripping slice of nineteenth-century Russia

It’s the middle of a hot, dusty St. Petersburg summer in the late 1860s. A doctor brings home a fancy box of chocolates for his wife and son—a strange gift on a sweltering Saturday afternoon. Within an hour, both mother and child die an excruciating death, and the doctor is immediately arrested, suspected of poisoning. As investigator Porfiry Petrovich concedes, in such cases the obvious solution often turns out to be the correct solution. And in the city’s steamy, oppressive atmosphere, even he lacks the energy to delve any deeper.

But when further, apparently unconnected, murders occur on the other side of town, a subtle and surprising pattern starts to emerge. Porfiry is forced to reassess his assumptions and follow a tenuous, uncertain trail that takes him into the hidden, squalid heart of the city and brings him face-to-face with incomprehensible horror and cruelty. A Vengeful Longing is a taut, enthralling mystery, a vivid and utterly unforgettable rendering of a brutal and stifling nineteenth- century St. Petersburg.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Set in St. Petersburg in 1868, Morris's superb second novel to feature Porfiry Petrovich (after The Gentle Axe) puts the detective borrowed from Dostoyevski's Crime and Punishment on the trail of a series of vile murders. When the wife and son of a doctor die after consuming a box of chocolates at their dacha, the obvious suspect is the morphine-addicted doctor. Then a shooting and a stabbing lead Petrovich elsewhere—to an elegant confectioner's full of pastries and possible revolutionaries as well as to the city's underworld. As Petrovich breaks in a new detective, the aptly named Pavel Virginsky, he introduces colleague and reader alike to the Russian capital and to the ills of the entire society. Morris captures this world with expert strokes, never content to merely peddle exotica, but making sure that his characters spring convincingly from their setting. While the person behind the crimes is a little unlikely, this novel stands out from a number of fine czarist-era mysteries—by Russians and foreigners alike—like a Fabergé egg at a yard sale. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Midsummer in St. Petersburg, 1868. It is hot and oppressive, and the reek of sewage, swarms of flies, and a cholera outbreak have the entire city on edge, even Investigative Magistrate Porfiry Petrovich. But Porfiry has three murder investigations to pursue, and he must train a new assistant, a brash young man he’d previously suspected of murder (The Gentle Axe, 2007). Each murder appears open-and-shut, but the cerebral Porfiry divines a connection and a single devious mind behind the crimes. The Gentle Axe was a solid debut, a reincarnation of Dostoevsky’s character from Crime and Punishment. But here Morris seems to have hit his stride. His characters come alive in all their destitution, pretension, madness, fractiousness, and humanity. His portrait of the city, abandoned by the well-to-do in summer, offers a rich, palpably fetid sense of place, and his depiction of nineteenth-century Russian society, festering with revolutionary notions and old grudges, is compelling. --Thomas Gaughan

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The (June 12, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1594201803
  • ISBN-13: 978-1594201806
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,564,825 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

London-based novelist Roger Morris is the author of three novels: Taking Comfort (Macmillan), and, writing as R.N. Morris, A Gentle Axe and A Vengeful Longing (both published by Faber and Faber in the UK and Penguin Press in America). A Vengeful Longing was shortlisted for the CWA Duncan Lawrie Dagger Award in 2008 and was runner-up in New York Magazine's Culture Awards 2008 for best thriller. His books have been translated into many languages and published around the world.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "An investigator...needs to be capable of looking into his own heart.", July 2, 2008
This review is from: A Vengeful Longing: A Novel (St. Petersburg Mysteries) (Hardcover)
It is June, 1868, in St. Petersburg, Russia. Pavel Pavlovich Virginsky, who had been an impoverished and emaciated student living on the edge in R. N. Morris's debut novel, "The Gentle Axe," has put on weight and dresses respectably now. He is a university graduate with a degree in law who has decided to follow in the footsteps of Porfiry Petrovich, "one of the best investigating magistrates in St. Petersburg." Petrovich, who works in the Department of the Investigation of Criminal Causes, has agreed to take the young man on as his assistant. Little does Virginsky know that he and his mentor are about to embark on a bizarre homicide investigation during which they will witness appalling scenes of carnage and peer into the darkest recesses of the human psyche.

First, a mother and her young son are poisoned after eating chocolates laced with a deadly substance; next, a former army colonel is gunned down in his apartment; finally, a drunken man is stabbed through the heart and left in the street to die. On the surface, these victims appear to have nothing in common, and in each case there is a convenient suspect. However, Porfiry is not convinced that the obvious answer is correct. He studies the background of the victims and uses his considerable understanding of the workings of the criminal mind to get to the bottom of this perplexing enigma.

"A Vengeful Longing" is an absorbing mystery that is enlivened by deliciously dark humor, spirited dialogue, and intriguing glimpses into the Russian class system during the late nineteenth century. The well-drawn cast includes Dr. Martin Meyer, a doctor with a degree in toxicology who is suspected of administering a deadly substance to his wife and child; Gorshkov, a former factory worker whose mind became unbalanced after the deaths of his daughters; and Lieutenant Salytov, a bigoted and quick-tempered policeman who resents Porfiry and constantly tries the magistrate's patience. Although he presents an unruffled demeanor to his colleagues, Porfiry has a compulsive streak evidenced by his chain smoking; he is rarely without a cigarette in his mouth. Nor is he an infallible detective who quickly deduces the answer to every question. Rather, his strength lies in his tenacity and his ability to think logically and imaginatively. With Virginsky, Porfiry shows a softer side, taking the time to instruct his apprentice in the finer points of criminal detection and encouraging the young man to express his ideas without fear of ridicule.

R. N. Morris beautifully captures the atmosphere of St. Petersburg, contrasting the fetid tenements where the starving poor live in degrading conditions with the well-appointed and spacious homes of the upper classes. The author also takes us inside the walls of an insane asylum, where the mentally ill are subject to relentless abuse. Revolution is in the air. The have-nots are becoming fed up with their miserable living conditions as well as with the fossilized bureaucrats who ignore their needs. This book, however, is more than a diatribe about the inequities of Russian society under the tsar. The author has a more subtle point to make, namely that everyone is capable of committing unspeakable acts under certain circumstances. It is the unenviable task of officials like Porfiry Petrovich to look beneath the façade that people present to the world and untangle the lies that are an inevitable part of any criminal inquiry. "Everything has meaning," says Porfiry. "One must grope for the signposts in the mist." In spite of its occasionally melodramatic plot, "A Vengeful Longing" is an entertaining and suspenseful novel that will please fans of literate historical fiction.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Behind the gilt domes, July 22, 2008
This review is from: A Vengeful Longing: A Novel (St. Petersburg Mysteries) (Hardcover)
In the steaming St.Petersberg summer of 1868, a doctor's wife and retarded son die a hideous death by poisoning. The doctor is the prime suspect of Investigating Magistrate, Porfiry Petrovich, who discovers that the poison was contained in the special chocolates that the doctor brought home for his wife every week. Very shortly afterwards, a man is stabbed and left to die on the street, and an army colonel is shot to death in his own home. Despite there being at first, no obvious connection beteen the three events, Porfiry is convinced that there is a definite link which connects them all and, with his new assitant, Virginsky, travels all over the city, interviewing anyone who had anything at all to do with any of the victims. His travels take him to unbelievably appalling slums which make those of Dickens's London seem like palaces..I've never read worse! The conditions under which the poorest of the peasant classes live defy description so that the reader may see the roots of the Russian revolution forming. I cannot say that it was a particularly enjoyable read but it was certainly a well written account of murder and abject poverty,
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Escape To Another Time And World, October 3, 2008
This review is from: A Vengeful Longing: A Novel (St. Petersburg Mysteries) (Hardcover)
This is a historical crime novel to be savored slowly. I enjoyed the lush descriptions, the leisurely character development, and the strong sense of both place and time throughout the book.

It was also fascinating to watch the "magistrate" (detective, in our time) work with the primitive investigative tools of the time. No special effects-laden, CSI-take-off here; just good hard police work and a great deal of reason, logic, and observation.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Raisa Ivanovna Meyer was sitting on the veranda of a rented dacha, listening to distant music from a pleasure boat as it filtered through successive screens of foliage. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
eleventh verst, investigating magistrate
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Porfiry Petrovich, Nikodim Fomich, Pavel Pavlovich, Colonel Setochkin, Lara Olsufevna, Raisa Ivanovna, Natalya Ivanovna, Lieutenant Salytov, Yaroslav Nikolayevich, Ilya Petrovich, Madam Josephine, Tatyana Ruslanovna, Ruslan Vladimirovich, Nastasya Petrovna, Raisa Meyer, Stolyarny Lane, Uninvited One, Nevsky Prospekt, Yekaterininsky Canal, Count Akhmatov, Department of Public Health, Haymarket District Police Bureau, Axenty Ivanovich, Prokuror Liputin, Nikolai Nobody
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