Many of Thomas Cook's
characters live on life's periphery. They are watchers, often
writers, people who observe but hesitate to jump freely into life's
maelstroms. Philip Anders is such a man, but when his best friend rows
out to the middle of a lake and slices his wrists, Anders needs to
find out why, and find out exactly what is the crime that drove
Julian Welles to his death.
Welles was a writer
too, but not a critic like Anders. He travelled, and he wrote of
places immersed in human cruelty, a veritable catalogue of all the
worst crimes that lie within the capabilities of man. But he was not
a part of that, in fact, as we read on we get the impression that
Anders may have been doing some sort of personal penance, or at least
investigation, of the motivations behind this behaviour. Nothing is
really what it seems, and Philip, who thought he knew his friend,
realises that he knew nothing important about him, in part because he
knows so little important about the world. Philip is aware of this:
'I had little doubt that Julian had often found himself floating in
some similar sea of strangeness, isolated, friendless, knowing little
of the language or the customs, short of money, with only history's
most vile miscreants to occupy his mind.' Note the way the poetry of
alliteration early in the sentence lulls you, in an almost horror
story way, before the straightforward tone of Philip's own analysis
explains his understanding.
Cook has written a
lovely, though chilling, Chinese box of a novel, full of hidden
compartments, mirrors in which things are reflected from different
angles, and panels that tell the same story from other perspectives.
The tale moves very slowly; its format almost cliched in its
simplicity, as Philip, later accompanied by Julian's sister Rosetta,
moves through the maze from person to person, each adding another bit
to Julian's story, each bit causing him to re-evaluate both Julian
and himself. The tale takes him back to a vacation trip the two young
men took to Argentina, and Marisol, the travel guide they met, who
was 'disappeared', as the term goes, in the days of the junta.
Philip's one true instinct is that her disappearance is the key to
the story, and his pursuit of that story is one of repeatedly lifting
covers, opening curtains, or raising blinds, to see what lies behind.
This may sound less
than thrilling, and Cook himself is aware of that. As Philip
explains: 'In a thriller it would be others who are trying to keep me
from finding things out. They'd be shooting at me or trying to run me
down in a car. But in this case it seems to be Julian who's covering
his tracks'.
But as is often the
case in Cook's novels, we, as readers, find ourselves standing in
Philip's shoes, seeing through his eyes, just as limited in vision as
he is. The real beauty of Cook's writing, the thing that makes him so
appreciated and perhaps accounts for his simultaneous
under-appreciation,is his ability to weave a thriller in this
fashion. It is the minutiae of observation, of human
understanding, of relationships, that form the crux of this book.
Perhaps indeed the greatest crimes are the ones we commit unknowingly. As
Philip is told: 'Betrayal is like a landslide in your soul, no?' he
said. 'After it, you cannot regain your footing'.
The Crime of Julian
Wells by Thomas H. Cook
Mysterious Press/Head
Of Zeus, £16.99, ISBN 9781908800145
Note: This review will also appear at Crime Time (www.crimetime.co.uk)
Note: This review will also appear at Crime Time (www.crimetime.co.uk)
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