Synopses & Reviews
May 31, 1883, 3:55 p.m. Twenty thousand men, women, and children, their faces shining in the late afternoon sun, are strolling the Eighth Wonder of the World. The Brooklyn Bridge is open just a week, its promenade a magnet for the teeming masses of New York and Brooklyn. Anxious to escape the heat, overcrowding, and disease of the tenements, thousands stream onto the soaring span. To breathe free, high above the choking confines of the city is an experience like no other. An engineering marvel of transcending beauty, the bridge is simply breathtaking.
In precisely five minutes, it will fall.
Seven desperate men, former Confederate soldiers turned saboteurs, have labored for years to destroy the bridge. A symbol of hated Yankee supremacy, the bridge is the creation of Chief Engineer, Washington Roebling. They have stalked him down through the years, with hatred born of bitter loss. His actions at Gettysburg have earned him terrible retribution. It is his bridge, his life's work that will pay the price. The river will run red but for one man.
Sergeant Detective Tom Braddock is one step behind the conspirators. Working through a series of murderous dead-ends, Braddock has dogged the seven men from the cables of the bridge to the shadowy alleys of the Lower East Side and the back streets of Richmond, Virginia. With the help of an eager roundsman, new to the force, he has slowly drawn closer to the unthinkable truth, a truth that none can accept.
Braddock's adversaries are many. Enemies within the police department seek to draw him deeper into a cesspool of corruption from which there seems no escape. To lose that battle is to surrender all hope, for his hands are far from clean already. Braddock must prevail against the enemy within if the bridge is to be saved. It is the love of Mary, the captivating Madame of a mid-town brothel that helps him find the way. Their fates are bound together, as surely as they are bound to the bridge. But it is Mike, a boy of the tenements, who literally holds the key to all their futures.
Suspension is a riveting historical thriller filled with fascinating details of the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge.
Review
"First novelist Crabbe is a thoughtful writer...His suspenseful, wel-researched historical will have Caleb Carr fans asking for more. Comparisons to The Alienist are well-earned." (Library Journal)
Review
"Few authors have been able to match [Caleb] Carr's knack for combining modern pacing and plot twists with the scholarship and research needed to bring an earlier age to life. A notable exception is Richard E. Crabbe...One hell of a fine yarn." (The San Francisco Chronicle)
Synopsis
In this thrilling first novel in the tradition of "The Alienist" and "The Great Bridge", a small group of die-hard Confederates, led by their fanatical captain, endeavors to destroy the Great East River Bridge nearly 20 years after the war.
Synopsis
May 31, 1883, 3:55 p.m. Twenty thousand men, women, and children, their faces shining in the late afternoon sun, are strolling the Eighth Wonder of the World. The Brooklyn Bridge is open just a week, its promenade a magnet for the teeming masses of New York and Brooklyn. An engineering marvel of transcending beauty, the bridge is simply breathtaking.
In precisely five minutes, it will fall.
Seven desperate men, former Confederate soldiers turned saboteurs, have labored for years to destroy the bridge, which they saw as a symbol of hated Yankee supremacy.
Sergeant Detective Tom Braddock is one step behind the conspirators. Working through a series of murderous dead-ends, Braddock has dogged the seven men from the cables of the bridge to the shadowy alleys of the Lower East Side and the back streets of Richmond, Virginia. Slowly, he has slowly drawn closer to the unthinkable truth, a truth that none can accept...
About the Author
Richard E. Crabbe has a 20-year career in advertising sales with
Advance Publications, The New York Post, Times Mirror, and currently Time Warner.
Suspension was penned substantially on the Staten Island ferry, commuting to Manhattan. He is a lifelong resident of Staten Island, where his wife Kim and three daughters, Chelsea, Amanda, and Rebecca have him happily outnumbered.
Reading Group Guide
1. The Brooklyn Bridge occupies a central role in
Suspension. As the most ambitious and monumental construction project of its day, it has an impact on every character in the book. Each is touched in different ways and sees different things when they look at the awesome, soaring span sweeping across the East River. How are the characters affected? How does each perceive it, and how are those perceptions colored by personal experience or motive?
2. Tom Braddock is an unusual man in many ways. His perceptions of tenement life, his relations with the Chinese on the Lower East Side, and his relationship with Mary are all contrary to the norms of the late nineteenth century. What does this say about Tom's character? Is he rejecting the norms for his own purposes or does he just follow his instincts? What does this illustrate about his value systems and how do those beliefs differ from the norms of the day?
3. The Civil War was the defining event of nineteenth century America. It deeply wounded the generation that fought it and forever altered the generations that came after. Very much like the Brooklyn Bridge, the war speaks to many of the characters in Suspension, particularly Tom and Thaddeus. In what ways have their experiences in the war influenced their lives? How have they been altered and in what ways are their motivations influenced by their war years?
4. Two of the conspirators, Lincoln and Sullivan, are ultimately affected by their work on the bridge in ways they do not anticipate. How do their perceptions change? Why do they change at all? What conflicts do those changes pose for Lincoln and Sullivan and how are they resolved?
5. Jumbo the elephant plays a critical role in Suspension. He is one of the keys to bringing Mike Bucklin and Tom Braddock closer together and ultimately solving the puzzle of the conspiracy. In a deeper sense, Jumbo is also a metaphorical character. How does Jumbo fulfill this role?
6. Emily Roebling was a remarkable woman. Her strength of character, her determination, and her drive to see the Brooklyn Bridge completed under her husband's direction are well documented. In what ways was she unusual for her time? How was she like Tom Braddock? What attributes do they share and how do those attributes affect 61 their attraction to each other?