The Unburied
Our Review
A Historical Murder Mystery of the Highest Order
In 1990, Charles Palliser made a spectacular debut with The Quincunx , a huge, densely plotted book that illuminates, in extraordinary detail, virtually every level of English society in the early 19th century. In his fourth novel, The Unburied, Palliser turns to the late Victorian era to give us an equally authorit...more
A Historical Murder Mystery of the Highest Order
In 1990, Charles Palliser made a spectacular debut with The Quincunx , a huge, densely plotted book that illuminates, in extraordinary detail, virtually every level of English society in the early 19th century. In his fourth novel, The Unburied, Palliser turns to the late Victorian era to give us an equally authorit...more
Paperback, 432 pages
Published
November 1st 2000
by Washington Square Press
(first published 1999)
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It took me three goes to get through this opus. 'Don't know why I kept plowing through to the 399th page. Perhaps it was the dust jacket's enthusiastic description: "brilliantly written...ingenious and atmospheric." Or perhaps it's because I'm very interested in 1880's England. In any case, I found several serious flaws in this novel: 1)the narrators and the other characters speak with the same voice, style; 2)some of the characters have modern attitudes that seem jarring set in this time and lo...more
The title of this book may suggest a horror story complete with zombies and vampires, but The Unburied is actually a scholarly murder mystery which reminded me of The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco or An Instance of the Fingerpost by Iain Pears. I wanted to read it because a few years ago I read another Charles Palliser book, The Quincunx, which I really enjoyed. Like The Quincunx, this one is set (mostly) in Victorian England. It begins with a mock ‘Editor’s Foreword’ in which we are told that...more
The strongest thing this book has going for it is its powerful sense of tone. Are you an Anglophile, particularly drawn to academic politics and social courtesies at Oxbridge in the late nineteenth century? Are you interested in the Gothic architecture of cathedrals, Anglican arguments over latitudinarianism, and the writing of medieval English history? If you answered yes to these questions, and you are a fan of both Christmas ghost stories set in the Victorian period and labyrinthine mysteries...more
Marvelous. Dense. Convoluted. Marvelous. I use the word richly too much but this is indeed a richly detailed and plotted near-masterpiece. Palliser plays with the style of Victorian novel to create a dense, multiple narrative piece that is not so much a ghost story as it is rather a haunted tale. The majority of this story is the account of Edward Courtine, historian and scholar, of his Christmas visit to the cathedral town of Thurchester and his part as witness to a notorious crime. The contemp...more
The Unburied is a stunning ordeal about mystery, a series of unfortunate events and a continuos string of twisted murders dating back form the mid 1600’s to now. The book is not like any other english mystery book with dual and bland dialogue but it draws readers into it with its suspense and it’s “Historical Murder Mystery of the Highest Order”. Dr. Edward Courtine reunites with his long lost friend from over 20 years Austin Fickling. While visiting Austin, Dr.Courtine is fascinated with a murd...more
This book is addictive - Mr. Palliser creates a fine story, conceived and presented as an edited collection of first hand accounts in which no-one knows the entirety of what is or was going on. Palliser balances presenting evidence to the reader, so that she might understand, and leaving his primary narrator entirely in the dark. In the narrator Dr. Courtine, Palliser has created the epitome of over-assured academia, leaving the reader to experience the full tragedy of events as this arrogant ac...more
“A big, fat murder mystery. It is a perfectly pitched pastiche of Victorian Gothic … compulsive reading.”
That’s what it said on the back cover, quoting the London Evening Standard, and I have to agree.
At the heart of the book is The Courtine Account, a document written in 1882 and put away to be opened only after the deaths of certain of those mentioned in its pages.
The Courtine Account was finally unsealed in 1919.
It was written by Doctor Edward Courtine, a historian, a distinguished academic b...more
That’s what it said on the back cover, quoting the London Evening Standard, and I have to agree.
At the heart of the book is The Courtine Account, a document written in 1882 and put away to be opened only after the deaths of certain of those mentioned in its pages.
The Courtine Account was finally unsealed in 1919.
It was written by Doctor Edward Courtine, a historian, a distinguished academic b...more
Charles Palliser is an interesting writer, well worth visiting. His "The Quincunx" outdid Dickens as a picture of Victorian England, in part because he eschews the saccharine moments CD was so fond of, as well as the grotesques whom CD favored as secondary characters.
I didn't like "The Unburied" as well as that book, though it's a good read. Mostly, I think, I didn't like the characters--they were not people I care to know. The first-person narrator is a wonderful example of an untrustworthy nar...more
I didn't like "The Unburied" as well as that book, though it's a good read. Mostly, I think, I didn't like the characters--they were not people I care to know. The first-person narrator is a wonderful example of an untrustworthy nar...more
This book is a mystery within a mystery within a mystery & all the mysteries parallel other mysteries or one another. Not as great as The Quincunx, tho it’s an ingenious concept. This one is a little TOO arcane & definitely requires the reader to take notes, especially in the beginning when you don’t realize what’s important & what’s not, as Palliser leads you down multiple wrong pathways. None of the characters in this book is attractive, so as you are reading you’re sort of wishing...more
Apr 25, 2010
Allison
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
mystery, historical fiction lovers
I was profoundly more impressed by this novel than Charles Palliser's first novel, 'The Quincunx'. As in that novel, here he has applied his formidable skills in evoking time and place, and has also incorporated his research into a lively novel filled with mystery and suspense. He has here applied an unusual format for the telling of his tale, in the form of a fictional editor's foreword and afterword which reveal the most telling clues to the mystery. The bulk of the narrative takes the form of...more
Honestly, I don't know why I stuck with this book till the bitter end. The premise sounds interesting -- an ancient unsolved mystery becomes wrapped up in a contemporary murder mystery that takes place in Victorian England. But I found the discussion of the ancient (we're talking ninth century) mystery to be dull and a bit confusing. It didn't seem to add anything to the main plotline, which turned out to be the contemporary murder mystery. Even then, the action just sort of dragged along, and i...more
Great writer, but a snooze, because I'm an ignoramus. You might like it, as it is historically accurate, especially in regards to social relations that so many writers seem to assume are the same as the modern world. It's a murder mystery, but there are no cliff hangers here, just a slow plod through a richly detailed landscape.
Die Geschichte um einen Spuk in einem kleinen Ort mit alter Kathedrale im 19. Jahrhundert scheint zunächst typischen Charles Dickens/Wilkie Collins-Charme zu beschwören. Doch dann packt Palliser einfach zu viele Stränge und Personen in den Plot, sodass man hoffnungslos überfordert und auch gelangweilt ist: Verschwörungen um den König Alfred im 9. Jahrhundert; einen Mord im Domkapitel im 17. Jahrhundert und jede Menge Personal des Jahres 1881. Vieles könnte man interessant finden, wenn es nicht s...more
I really, really, really wanted to like this book. I had heard such great things about Pallsier's Quincunx and found this one in the used book store. I loved the cover and couldn't wait to get it home.
I kept waiting for the story to pick up....for something to happen. The action is non existant. The pacing is excrutiating. The only way I could have gotten through this book is if I had actually manacled myself to one spot for a day and forced myself to get through it. As it was, I only made it ha...more
I kept waiting for the story to pick up....for something to happen. The action is non existant. The pacing is excrutiating. The only way I could have gotten through this book is if I had actually manacled myself to one spot for a day and forced myself to get through it. As it was, I only made it ha...more
One disadvantage to having written a book as superlative as The Quincunx is that it is so easy for your subsequent work to come off as less so in comparison. Although I'm inclined to find it an objectively less-satisfying book, it is unlikely, for instance, that one of my complaints would be that the plot (involving forged documents, scholarly rivalries, unsolved murders, etc.) is too simple, were not my expectations pegged by that earlier novel.
Still, in spite of some saminess, a solid and ente...more
Still, in spite of some saminess, a solid and ente...more
I'll begin by saying I really, really, really wanted to like this book. Perhaps that's the reason I find myself still giving it three stars instead of two.
I love novels with twisty plots set in dark, Gothic places. I find modern interpretations of the genre spun by Wilkie Collins and Charles Dickens some of my favorite fiction (i.e. "The Meaning of Night", awesome novel). However, while this novel did have the requisite setting and is well written, the plot is anything but twisty.
We find most...more
I love novels with twisty plots set in dark, Gothic places. I find modern interpretations of the genre spun by Wilkie Collins and Charles Dickens some of my favorite fiction (i.e. "The Meaning of Night", awesome novel). However, while this novel did have the requisite setting and is well written, the plot is anything but twisty.
We find most...more
I really hate when I don't hit SAVE before leaving my Review.
Whatever: Victorian-style ghost story, murder mystery, angry old friends, Alfred the Great, Christmas.
It didn't light my fire, eventually I'll read The Quincunx but I'm not in a big hurry now, etc. etc. My previous review made comparisons to Umberto Eco and Arthur Conan Doyle, and also Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins, but it all felt too forced and "Look at me" and it was a bit of a turn-off.
And some other stuff. Whatever.
Whatever: Victorian-style ghost story, murder mystery, angry old friends, Alfred the Great, Christmas.
It didn't light my fire, eventually I'll read The Quincunx but I'm not in a big hurry now, etc. etc. My previous review made comparisons to Umberto Eco and Arthur Conan Doyle, and also Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins, but it all felt too forced and "Look at me" and it was a bit of a turn-off.
And some other stuff. Whatever.
Picked this up while waiting for The Quincunx to become available at the library, but now I'm not sure I'll want to read it, on the strength of The Unburied. I ought to like it: it's set in a 19th century cathedral close and centers around an academic mystery within a mystery. But here I am halfway through and I don't care about the characters (most of them run together, not being sufficiently developed or distinct) and I don't even care about the mystery. Life's too short, so I'm moving on to t...more
I must say that I almost stopped reading this book when I was halfway through because I thought the plot was taking much too long to develop. But I kept on reading because I somehow felt that it would get better and it did:) I think it took me over a week to read the first half and about 2 days to read the second half! What bothered me at first was that I just couldn't figure out when the story was taking place and kept wondering if it was the 18th or 19th century (either there were very few clu...more
An interesting book which deserves a second read as I'm not sure I quite appreciated it first time round. At first glance, it contains all the elements I would ordinarily leap at in a novel, as I'm a sucker for books about books or antiquarian mysteries. However, I struggled to really get my teeth into this one. I found myself flicking through the pages at quite a pace, anxious to find out the mystery. I'm ordinarily not so impatient, but the purposefully obtuse and often convoluted nature of th...more
The title of this book may suggest a horror story complete with zombies and vampires, but The Unburied is actually a scholarly murder mystery which reminded me of The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco or An Instance of the Fingerpost by Iain Pears. I wanted to read it because a few years ago I read another Charles Palliser book, The Quincunx, which I really enjoyed. Like The Quincunx, this one is set (mostly) in Victorian England. It begins with a mock 'Editor's Foreword' in which we are told that...more
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Another layered story featuring divergent accounts of the same circumstances and stories-within-stories-within stories, like Russian nesting dolls. More straightforward and conclusive than Betrayals, which accounts for the minus (based on degree of difficulty).
We begin with the editor's foreword to a book dealing with something known as The Thurcester Mystery (although it is not the editor's note for The Thurcester Mystery itself). The foreword recounts the editor's visit to an unidentified eld...more
We begin with the editor's foreword to a book dealing with something known as The Thurcester Mystery (although it is not the editor's note for The Thurcester Mystery itself). The foreword recounts the editor's visit to an unidentified eld...more
I think it must be a keystone of the genre of Victorian fiction for it to be slow-moving. Despite the snail’s pacing, it is an interesting and well-written novel. My biggest issue with it lies with its rather annoyingly repetitive style - the same three stories are retold over and over again, each time with a new possible solution, but with none of the set-up presented any differently! So, while it is interesting overall, it is just not terribly engrossing. It’s too easy to put the book aside, a...more
The blurb made this novel sound very promising but I found it unsatisfying for a number of reasons... for a start the book was a least one hundred pages too long and large chunks were denoted to theories about the history of King Alfred - pointless to the mystery itself. Actually, the mystery was a good one which is why I stuck with it but the unravelling was laboured and revealed in a disappointing way. The setting was dreary and dusty, a bit like most of the characters. Not one to recommend, b...more
This book came with very high praise from many critics and I was ready to settle into a good old fashioned ghost story. I had some trouble in the first few chapters getting into the story, but it didn't take long for the multiple stories to grab my attention. I didn't want to put it down! Not all that much of a ghost story though. But, a very, very good mystery, or two.
It's a shame that Charles Palliser has written so few books, because the two of his I've read, this and The Quincunx, I've thoroughly enjoyed. This is another Victorian-era mystery, full of complicated plots and twists and turns, about scholarship and inheritance and revenge. I seem to reading a lot of Victorian books this year!
This is a Victorian murder mystery that's so complex and erudite that I'm still not sure I entirely understand who dun it. Palliser is also the author of The Quincunx, an astonishingly complicated mystery that's set in something like the 16th century. Great writer and a formidable plotter -- this'll keep you on your toes.
If you're into Victorian skullduggery mysteries, this is the perfect book. I can't stress enough how much you have to pay close attention. It is not a quick supermarket paperback read. There are many precursor clues that all tie in at the end. But the payoff is well worth the time and effort. Highly recommended.
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Charles Palliser (born 1947) is an American-born, British-based novelist. He is the elder brother of the late author and freelance journalist Marcus Palliser.
Born in New England he is an American citizen but has lived in the United Kingdom since the age of three. He went up to Oxford in 1967 to read English Language and Literature and took a First in June 1970. He was awarded the B. Litt. in 1975...more
More about Charles Palliser...
Born in New England he is an American citizen but has lived in the United Kingdom since the age of three. He went up to Oxford in 1967 to read English Language and Literature and took a First in June 1970. He was awarded the B. Litt. in 1975...more
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Jun 03, 2009 11:02am