A Handbook On Hanging
By (Author) Charles Duff
The New York Review of Books, Inc
NYRB Classics
15th September 2006
Main
United States
General
Non Fiction
364.6601
Paperback
232
Width 126mm, Height 203mm, Spine 17mm
250g
A Handbook on Hanging is a Swiftian tribute to that unappreciated mainstay of civilization: the hangman. With barbed insouciance, Charles Duff writes not only of hanging but of electrocution, decapitations, and gassings; of innocent men executed and of executions botched; of the bloodlust of mobs and the shabby excuses of the great. This coruscating and, in contemporary America, very relevant polemic makes clear that whatever else capital punishment may be said to be-justice, vengeance, a deterrent-it is certainly killing.
"In its literary aspect it is deftly done. Smoothly, earnestly, unctuously the author carries on his defense of hanging as a fine art and his plea for bigger and better and more frequent hangings, never for a moment forgetting his pose or dropping his disguise, and never giving the reader the least ground for suspecting his good faith...He has made for the crusade against capital punishment a very effective stroke." The New York Times
"A minor classic." Dylan Thomas
"Likely to upset the equanimity of upholders of capital punishment far more than any ponderous tome of high explosive argument or invective." The Observer
Charles Duff (1894-1966) served as an officer in the British Merchant Navy during World War I and then in the intelligence division of the Foreign Office and Diplomatic Service. After retiring, he taught linguistics and languages in London and Singapore while writing travel guides, histories, satires, and a series of text books. Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair and a visiting professor of Liberal Studies at the New School.