angelfireeast24's review

Go to review page

dark emotional informative mysterious tense medium-paced

2.5

The principal story at the core of this book is interesting BUT the writer goes off topic at so many different points I lost the thread of what this book was about
Especially when the arthor started to detail other inmates & lives of guards of Broadmoor. While the tales where interesting I started to wonder who the book was about and why these stories weren't in a separate about book about Broadmoor. Same goes for the wartime stories & more that went far beyond Robert & general context.
This book could use a strong editor because there is a interesting tale of a life of a boy who grew into a interesting man. I learned more in the final chapter with greater emotion in a quick summation the arthor made then 10 chapters of time wasting. It's such a shame

Expand filter menu Content Warnings

jhbandcats's review against another edition

Go to review page

adventurous dark informative inspiring mysterious sad medium-paced

5.0

A tale of unexpected redemption and love, The Wicked Boy shows a life begun in distress in a poor and polluted industrial area, tempered in an asylum and in war, and mellowed in the peacefulness of farm work. The author keeps the matricide in the context of late Victorian England and its ideas of adolescence, family, class, crime, and insanity.

This is the  second of Kate Summerscale's books I've read, the first - The Suspicions of Mr Whicher - is as well-researched as this. She shows a boy growing up with an emotional mother, a timid younger brother, and a mostly absent seaman father. In this atmosphere of oppression, where all he wants is to escape to have adventures like those in his favorite magazines, it's not altogether surprising that 13-year-old Robert Coombes chose to kill his mother to protect his brother and have a bit of freedom. (Well, yes, it is surprising, but it makes some sense in Summerscale's telling.)

I found the post-murder sections on Broadmoor, the asylum for the criminally insane, and WWl to be the most compelling. Broadmoor taught Robert how to live among others and to learn a trade, and the war taught him to be a man. After the war. he settled in a small Australian town and worked his plot of vegetables and milked his cows. He gave neighborhood children music lessons, played the cornet in veterans' parades, and offered protection to a teenage neighbor to save him from a violent stepfather. The murder itself was appalling but the subsequent fifty-plus years are the real story.

Highly recommended for people interested in true crime and Victorian London.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
More...