Don't Miss
More at Powell's
Interviews | November 19, 2009
By Dave
 [Editor's note: The following is a reprint of our 2005 interview with John Irving, whose new novel, Last Night in Twisted River, has just come out...
Continue »
-
 |
This item may be out of stock.
Click on the button below to search for this title in other formats.
Check for Availability
Pinkerton's Secret (John MacRae Books)
by Eric Lerner
|
|
|
|
Synopses & Reviews This romantic adventure conjures up the passionate life story of the Civil War era's legendary private eye, recounting dramatic exploits and his clandestine love affair with his partner Allan Pinkerton's story opens in Chicago on the eve of the American Civil War. After battling con men, train robbers, and vicious gunmen, Pinkerton senses that change is in the air. Already committed to the abolitionist cause and the Underground Railroad, he allies himself with John Brown's radical antislavery crusade. Upholding the law with one hand, he unapologetically breaks it with the other. Kate Warne joins the Pinkerton Agency — its first female detective — and quickly takes her place as Allan's closest confidante. He asks Kate to join him, and she embraces his cause in all its contradictions and extremes. Comrades-in-arms, their romantic passion becomes the most combustible and irresistible kind, the mutual affirmation of a world of two. Together they save the life of Abraham Lincoln on his inaugural journey to Washington, root out Confederate spies within the Union government, and establish the nation's first Secret Service, sending their agents deep behind enemy lines. Blind to all consequences, the secret lovers learn too late that some battles, no matter how right the cause, cannot be won. Review: "Former screenwriter Lerner's debut creatively reanimates Allan Pinkerton, founder of the country's first detective agency. Pinkerton narrates his adventuresome life and times, beginning in 1856 Chicago, as his Pinkerton National Detective Agency recruits a few good (male) operatives. When attractive, young Kate Warne applies for the job, she unknowingly puts female detectives into the history books. Tentatively at first (due to her 'femaleness'), Pinkerton slowly warms to Kate and her sleuthing acumen, particularly after she helps crack a major case and goes on to assist in thwarting a Maryland secessionist plot. As the pair's success grows, so does a romance, which gets messy since Pinkerton is already married. Meanwhile, Pinkerton's agency foils an assassination attempt on Abraham Lincoln, and Pinkerton establishes the nation's first secret service unit (in service to the Union Army), which takes on increasingly dangerous exploits. Lerner highlights Pinkerton's progressive politics and distinctive personal history with uncanny accuracy throughout this sharp-witted, romantic channeling of America's prototype investigative innovator." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.) Review: "Allan Pinkerton's life story has always read like a spy thriller. The hard-edged Scottish immigrant entered the pages of history as the founder of the famous Pinkerton National Detective Agency and as the head of the Union intelligence service during the Civil War. The dramatic Pinkerton logo — with the motto 'We Never Sleep' coiled beneath the image of a stern, unblinking eye — became such a potent ... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review) and universal emblem that it inspired the phrase 'private eye.' Pinkerton was also a staunch abolitionist, running a station on the Underground Railroad at great personal risk, and an early convert to the notion of women in the workplace, hiring America's first female detective, a young widow named Kate Warne, in 1856. The career of Kate Warne forms an intriguing chapter of the Pinkerton story, though the official record of her service is sketchy at best. Pinkerton had grave reservations about placing a woman in harm's way, but Warne managed to convince him, as he later recounted it, that she would be able to 'worm out secrets in many places to which it was impossible for male detectives to gain access.' Over the years it has been suggested that Pinkerton's interest in Warne evolved into something more than that of a protective employer — they are buried side by side — but this remains a subject for speculation. In any event, Pinkerton made no secret of his high opinion of her work as an agent: 'Mrs. Warne never let me down.' Eric Lerner, a successful screenwriter, has fleshed out the bones of this story into a gripping historical novel. He brings a cloak-and-dagger sensibility to episodes such as the 'Baltimore Plot' to assassinate President-elect Lincoln as he traveled to Washington for his inauguration, and the smashing of the Confederate spy ring headed by Rose Greenhow, the notorious 'Wild Rose of the Confederacy.' In Lerner's hands, even the cotton futures market becomes the stuff of drama. At the same time, the author cannily exploits the gaps in the Pinkerton legend where imagination can be given free rein, creating a tense and complicated relationship between Pinkerton and the steely Warne. 'Pinkerton's Secret' is cast as a memoir penned by Pinkerton in his twilight years. Lerner's Pinkerton is driven, vain and unforgiving, seeking to correct misconceptions and settle old scores: 'I am not so naive as to be unaware that today, in 1883, when so many things are taken for granted in our modern age, some readers of this memoir will jump to the conclusion that I am merely taking credit for the obvious and living up to my detractors' charge of grandiosity,' he writes. 'In point of fact, my method was not at all obvious back then, and only seems so today because it was obvious then to me alone, and over the course of my long career I have succeeded, in the face of incredulity, in making it obvious to one and all.' Pinkerton's single-minded devotion to duty leaves him somewhat oblivious to the carryings-on of his employees. On the eve of a crucial mission, when he discovers that Warne has fallen in love with Timothy Webster, his best operative, Pinkerton responds with blinkered outrage: 'What in hell was going on? I could not spare a single precious moment to find out, when the fate of the Nation weighed so heavily on my shoulders. I had to maintain at all costs my composure under fire and not allow myself to be distracted from the most important mission of my life by the silly romantic byplay of my two operatives.' Soon enough, however, Pinkerton's composure slips away as he himself falls prey to Warne's charms, becoming embroiled in a romantic triangle that tests his resolve and his loyalties. When Pinkerton sends his rival on a dangerous mission behind enemy lines, Lerner catches a note of nagging self-doubt in the detective's attempt to justify his actions: 'It all made perfect strategic sense. I am not going to waste the reader's time debating the question of whether I had some ulterior motive ... I was trying to win a war! The idea that I set it all up just to have access to Mrs. Warne is preposterous.' Lerner has a jarring habit of breaking the flow of his narrative with provocative, over-the-top zingers intended to shock and titillate. Abraham Lincoln is described as a 'ninny,' Lincoln's wife is a 'crazy bitch' and God, no less, is dismissed as a 'miserable, lonely, horny bastard.' When these histrionics lose their punch, Lerner simply drops the Big Expletive, often to ludicrous effect. It is hard to imagine a reader above the age of 15 who will warm to this. The author does better when he lets the material breathe on its own. Late in the book, Pinkerton and Warne lament the fate of a black man who had performed dangerous missions for the agency during the war, but later, under the restrictive politics of Reconstruction, found himself mopping floors in a sheriff's office. 'I know you tried to keep him on as an operative,' Warne says. 'But you could hire an entire female detective force before you could employ one black detective.' It is one of many fine moments in this novel where history speaks for itself." Reviewed by Daniel Stashower, author of 'The Beautiful Cigar Girl: Mary Rogers, Edgar Allan Poe and the Invention of Murder'), Washington Post Book World (Copyright 2006 Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group)
(hide most of this review) Review: "Despite some grating linguistic anachronisms ('gobbledygook,' 'I'll have his ass in a sling'), a novel of wonderful historical plausibilities." Kirkus About the Author Eric Lerner has written a memoir, Journey of Insight Meditation (Schocken, 1976), about his experiences traveling and living in Buddhist monasteries and communities in Asia and America. This background in the arcane led to his subsequent 20-year career as a screenwriter and producer in Hollywood. Films with his name on them include Bird on a Wire and Augustus, starring Peter O'Toole and Charlotte Rampling. Lerner currently lives in Boston.
Product Details
- ISBN:
- 9780805082784
- Publisher:
- Henry Holt & Company
- Subject:
- Mystery & Detective - General
- Author:
- Lerner, Eric
- Subject:
- Historical - General
- Subject:
- Private investigators
- Subject:
- Secret service
- Subject:
- Mystery & Detective - Historical
- Subject:
- Historical fiction
- Subject:
- General Fiction
- Subject:
- Biographical fiction
- Edition Description:
- Updated Hardcover
- Series:
- John MacRae Books
- Publication Date:
- March 2008
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- Grade Level:
- General/trade
- Language:
- English
- Pages:
- 317
- Dimensions:
- 9.44x6.42x1.05 in. 1.19 lbs.
Other books you might like
-
-
|