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Half Moon Street
  

Half Moon Street (Hardcover)

by Anne Perry (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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Secrets and lies, calumnies and evasions: in Anne Perry's Victorian mysteries, these elements, rather than a hat or gloves, a bustle or a watch fob, are the usual accoutrements of refined ladies and gentlemen. Half Moon Street marks the return of Inspector Thomas Pitt (20 novels now, beginning with The Cater Street Hangman and still going strong) to the cobblestoned streets and elegant drawing rooms of 19th-century London.

The inhabitants of those drawing rooms aren't usually thrilled to see him, because he always comes bearing bad news. This time, a body has turned up in a boat on the Thames: Delbert Cathcart, a talented portrait photographer with a taste for blackmail. Clad in a velvet dress, wrists manacled, legs spread grotesquely, skull crushed, Cathcart reminds Pitt of a perverse echo of the Lady of Shalott, or perhaps a debased Ophelia. Which of Cathcart's clients could have been pushed so far as to retaliate in such hideous fashion?

Pitt's official investigation is usually combined with another more idiosyncratic approach to the crime; this secondary analysis gives Perry free rein to dissect the manners and morals of Victorian society. In Half Moon Street, the genteel inquisition falls to Caroline Fielding, Charlotte's mother (Charlotte, who must need a bit of rest after so many outings, has been packed off to Paris for a vacation; her presence in the book is restricted to letters marveling, rather tediously, at the scandalous iniquities of the Moulin Rouge dance hall). Perry's readers will no doubt remember that Caroline scandalized society by marrying a much younger actor, Joshua. Half Moon Street introduces Caroline to his theatrical world, and to Cecily Antrim, a beautiful actress with liberal politics. Cecily poses both a personal and philosophical threat to Caroline, who is disturbed by her willingness to expose the realities of female sexuality on stage: "Should such things be said? Was there something indecent in the exposure of feelings so intimate? To know it herself was one thing, to realize that others also knew was quite different. It was being publicly naked rather than privately." This fear of exposure resonates through the worlds of theatrical and photographic art, as actors, diplomats, and genteel citizens race to hide their secrets from Pitt and Caroline.

While Perry evokes the London atmosphere with her usual skill, her narrative lacks its usual finesse. Rather than balancing Pitt's and Caroline's investigation, the novel lurches between them so that it seems all too often that Perry, in pursuit of one story, has forgotten the other. Additionally, Caroline's reaction to feminist politics and sexuality is inexplicably repetitive; her turgid expressions of horror seem the result of an overly eager copy-and-paste procedure. One hopes that this is a momentary lapse in an otherwise solid series. --Kelly Flynn --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Set in Oscar Wilde's London in 1891, Perry's new Thomas Pitt mystery is all about the importance of being earnest. Superintendent Pitt is summoned to the Thames when police discover the body of a young man dressed in a torn green velvet gown, manacled to a punt, "in parody of ecstasy and death." At first it seems the victim is Henri Bonnard, a functionary in the French embassy; eventually, Pitt and dour sidekick Sergeant Tellman identify the body as Delbert Cathcart, a gifted photographer. Was there a connection between Cathcart and lookalike Bonnard? Why was Cathcart's body arranged in that disturbing "feminine pose," which Perry repeatedly describes as a "mockery" of paintings of the Lady of Shallot and Ophelia? Meanwhile, Pitt's mother-in-law, Caroline Fielding, recently married to an actor 17 years her junior, blushes and stammers as her husband and his theater friends expound on Ibsen. While she's clarifying her views on the irresponsibility of pornography, Caroline spends long hours entertaining Samuel Ellison, her late husband's American half-brother, who tearfully recounts his nation's history ("I watched the white man strengthen and the red man die"). For a grandma, Caroline is an oddly jejune character, and her moralistic musings overwhelm the mystery plot, which stagnates early on. What's clearly intended to be intellectually challenging comes across as silly and pretentious. There's even a pub scene in which Wilde himself witlessly pontificates, and "a pale young Irishman addressed by his fellows as Yeats, stare[s] moodily into the distance." 15-city author tour; audio rights to Random House Audio. (Apr..
- moodily into the distance." 15-city author tour; audio rights to Random House Audio. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

30 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (30 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great read, lots of twists. Must read.., Jul 24 2008
By Wariner (Hamilton, Ontario) - See all my reviews
This is an excellent book with lots of twists and turns. The best plot was the second story with Charlotte's mother Caroline finding out her deceased husband has a half brother.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A changing world..., Jul 14 2003
Excellent entry in the Thomas and Charlotte Pitt series, with Pitt trying to solve the mystery of a man found dead and drifting in a punt on the Thames River. Pitt is more on his own in this book, and Charlotte does not figure as prominently as before, but I did not see that as a drawback. Pitt's investigations take him to the bohemian parts of London, to the world of the theater. Pitt's search for the truth, along with help from Charlotte, shows us how the world is changing, from the Victorian to the modern.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Dickens' social conscience, Nov 23 2001
By Paul Ammann (New Fairfield, CT United) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Half Moon Street begins with a bizarre murder that pitches Inspector Thomas Pitt into London's Bohemia, the playwrights battling against censorship and the new art of photography being wrought. With his wife Charlotte on holiday in Paris, Pitt is aided by her mother, now married to an actor. And in the booksellers and tobacconists of Half Moon Street, Pitt discovers a sinister side of the photographers art.
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Most recent customer reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars If you're looking for a mystery - don't look here!
If you're looking for a mystery - don't look here! The author began to write a wonderful book then decided to lose the main plot. Read more
Published on Jun 24 2001

3.0 out of 5 stars Did Thomas Have A Stroke?
In this book, Thomas is cited as being unfamiliar with photography, other than it's some type of portraiture. Read more
Published on May 31 2001 by M. Graham

4.0 out of 5 stars My favorite Victorian author
Anne Perry really knows how to tell a Victorian story. I've read all of her books (Pitt and Monk) and never tire of turning back the clock. Read more
Published on May 8 2001

4.0 out of 5 stars More than just a whodunit
Anne Perry takes to her soapbox in this primarily Thomas Pitt mystery. Usually aided in detection by his wife, Charlotte, Pitt must rely solely on the assistance of Sgt. Read more
Published on April 23 2001 by janmcalex

1.0 out of 5 stars More of the Same
I have vowed that I would never read another Anne Perry mystery again. Then in a moment of weakness and in the absence of anything more appealing, I bought and read Half Moon... Read more
Published on Feb 15 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars wow!
Anne Perry is one of the finest mystery writers in our generation. She subtly weaves mystery and intrigue with an adept look at the values and culture of a society so different... Read more
Published on Jan 11 2001 by Tiffany Wacaser

2.0 out of 5 stars What was the mystery here?
This was my first Anne Perry mystery and unless something else by her is more interesting, she is going on my don't read list. What was the real story/mystery here? Read more
Published on Jan 5 2001 by Hannah M. Hurey

3.0 out of 5 stars A quarter moon
I love the Pitt series but this novel is missing something without Charlotte. It really wasn't as enjoyable as the others and it left me craving something more. Read more
Published on Oct 28 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars Another great Anne Perry Book
Anne Perry mixes controversial issues of Victorian Times and today in her novels. The issue this time is censorship and pornography. Read more
Published on Oct 17 2000 by Moe811

2.0 out of 5 stars moonless
This book was a painful read.Ms Perry's attempt to answer her readers' demand for an in-depth approndissement of character development was less than seamless. Read more
Published on Sep 9 2000

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