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A Question of Guilt

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224
PAGES
~3h 44min
READING TIME
English
LANGUAGE
Simon Pulse 7 views
ISBN
0606096736, 9780606096737
Editions
Paperback
Library Binding
Hardcover
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About Author

Richard Gordon

British author of the popular Doctor series of comic novels. A surgeon, Gordon also wrote nonfiction books about the history of medicine. The Doctor Series: Doctor in the House. London: Michael Joseph. 1952. Doctor at Sea. London: Michael Joseph. 1953. Doctor at Large. London: Michael Joseph. 1955. Doctor in Love. London: Michael Joseph. 1957. Doctor and Son. London: Michael Joseph. 1959. Doctor in Clover. London: Michael Joseph. 1960. Doctor on Toast. London: Michael Joseph. 1961. Doctor in the Swim. London: Michael Joseph. 1962. Love and Sir Lancelot. Heinemann. 1965. Doctor on the Boil. Heinemann. 1970. Doctor on the Brain. Heinemann. 1972. Doctor in the Nude. Heinemann. 1973. The Sleep of Life. Heinemann. 1975. Doctor on the Job. Heinemann. 1976. Doctor in the Nest. Heinemann. 1979. Doctor's Daughters. Heinemann. 1981. Doctor on the Ball. 1985. Doctor in the Soup. 1986.

Description

Another vivid, grisly fictional reappraisal of a true crime case--by the crisply British author of Jack the Ripper and many other medically informed novels. Here Gordon interweaves the ever-familiar Crippen case with the story of two Crippen acquaintances: Dr. Eliot Beckett, who runs a free clinic in Edwardian London; and his nurse/lover Nancy--an American heiress whose tubercular sister ""Baby"" has died in a Swiss sanitorium. And among those who have offered advice on ""Baby's"" case is American-born nostrums peddler Hawley Harvey Crippen, a modest con man with vague medical credentials. So Eliot and Nancy have some inside views as the focus turns to Crippen's own domestic crisis: he's in love with typist Ethel Le Neve but married to Belle--a fat, adulterous, stupid-shrewd, would-be vaudevillian with expensive tastes. It is Ellot's copy of Gray's Anatomy, in fact, which provides Crippen with the necessary information for the murder: he poisons Belle, beheads her, eviscerates and debones the body in the bathtub--burying the remains under the cellar coal pile. (The bones, meanwhile, find their way to Poupart's Piccadilly Potted Meat company.) From the scene of the crime to well-sketched trial: an ironic reconstruction, laced with black comedy and grim wit--clever, stylish, but not for those with delicate stomachs. (Kirkus Review)

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