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Speakers of the Dead: A Walt Whitman Mystery

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Speakers of the Dead: A Walt Whitman Mystery

Contributors:

By (Author) J. Aaron Sanders

ISBN:

9780143128717

Publisher:

Penguin Putnam Inc

Imprint:

Plume

Publication Date:

1st March 2016

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

813.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

320

Dimensions:

Width 135mm, Height 203mm

Weight:

227g

Description

The year is 1843, the place, New York City. When reporter Walt Whitman's friend is hanged for the murder of her husband - a crime she did not commit - Walt vows to exonerate her. With the help of her estranged boyfriend, the two men uncover a link between body-snatching and the murder: a man called Samuel Clement. To get to Clement, Walt and Henry descend into a dangerous underworld where men steal the bodies of the recently deceased and sell them to medical colleges. A vibrant reimagining of one of America's most beloved literary figures.

Reviews

Boldly plotted and compulsively readable, Speakers of the Dead is a welcome discovery for any fan of literary history thrillers. Sanders's debut pulls off an elusive accomplishment, making us rethink what we know about favorite historical figures and entertaining us at the same time.
Matthew Pearl, author of The Last Bookaneer and The Dante Club

InSpeakers of the Dead, the conceit alone is worthy of your attention, Whitman as detective, but Aaron Sanders goes above and beyond in creating a character and a world that feels both entirely authentic and yet deliriously imagined, supported by elegant prose that demands your attention. This is what you want from a good mystery, enough verve and complexity that you cannot focus on anything else, and Sanders does this as well as anyone in the game.
Kevin Wilson, author of The Family Fang

A vivid and engaging adventure, written with a modern freshness and understanding of which the young Whitman himself might have approved.
Nicola Upson, author of The Death of Lucy Kyte

How did reporter Walt Whitman transform himself from an unremarkable New York flaneur into Americas most visionary poet J. Aaron Sanders pursues this mystery as passionately as he does the murders and body snatchers slipping through the shadows of nineteenth-century New York. A first-rate literary mystery, thrilling and illuminating in equal measure.
Sherill Tippins, author of Inside the Dream Palace: The Life and Times ofNew Yorks Legendary Chelsea Hotel

In Speakers of the Dead, J. Aaron Sanders gives us Walt Whitman as we've never seen hima young, jaunty, and ambitious reporter, who risks his life for truth. Sanders confident prose and deft storytelling come together in a transporting novel that is at once a mystery, a tragedy, and a tale of deep friendship. From its stunning opening of a young woman at the gallows, the novel gallops along, taking us along for the ride, and all the while we see glimmers of the poet Whitman is to become. An old-fashioned novel in the best sense. Riveting and haunting.
Rae Meadows, author of Mercy Train

Not only is Speakers of the Dead an action-packed thriller, it presents afresh and surprising portrayal of the poet Walt Whitman as a brawling, crusading investigative journalist hot-on-the-heels of a murder mystery through the streets of nineteenth century New York. Quite a feat for a first time novelist and what fun!
Michael Knight, author ofThe Typist

[I]n Sanderss gripping first novel, set in New York City in 1843, Walt Whitman, a 23 year-old- reporter, tries but fails to rescue a friend of hisfrom the hangman at the Tombs, the city jail. [T]he authorimbues all his characters, even the villains, with humanity. Fans of Daniel Stashowers account of the Mary Rogers case, The Beautiful Cigar Girl, wont want to miss this auspicious debut.
PW

An elegant literary mystery [and] a fine debut, bringing to vivid life one of Americas greatest poets and presenting a fresh perspective on a less-familiar period of U.S. history.
Library Journal, starred review

This is both the authors first novel and the first of a series that brings Whitman to vibrant life, in a fashion similar to what Stephanie Barron has done for Jane Austen and Gyles Brandreth for Oscar Wilde.
Booklist

Sanderss novel brings this fascinating time and place in American history to vivid life and spins a gripping and gruesome narrative of how a close encounter with death transformed a young man into a towering artist.
The Rumpus

Gorgeous and emotional [Speakers of the Dead presents] Sanders as an exceptionally skillful and poetic writer.
Lamda Literary Review

Author Bio

J. Aaron Sanders is Associate Professor of English at Columbus State University where he teaches literature and creative writing. He holds a PhD in American Literature from The University of Connecticut and an MFA in Fiction from The University of Utah. His stories have appeared inCarolina Quarterly,Gulf Coast,Quarterly West, andBeloit Fiction Journal, among others. This is his first novel.

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