His Bloody Project: Documents Relating to the Case of Roderick Macrae (Man Booker Prize Finalist 2016)

Awards:   Short-listed for Man Booker Prize 2016 (UK)
Author:   Graeme Burnet
Publisher:   Skyhorse Publishing
ISBN:  

9781628728309


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   28 September 2017
Format:   Paperback
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His Bloody Project: Documents Relating to the Case of Roderick Macrae (Man Booker Prize Finalist 2016)


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Awards

  • Short-listed for Man Booker Prize 2016 (UK)

Overview

"MAN BOOKER PRIZE FINALIST LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK PRIZE FINALIST NAMED A BEST BOOK OF 2016 BY NEWSWEEK, NPR, THE GUARDIAN, THE TELEGRAPH, AND THE SUNDAY TIMES A NEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE ""THOUGHT PROVOKING FICTION""—THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW A brutal triple murder in a remote Scottish farming community in 1869 leads to the arrest of seventeen-year-old Roderick Macrae. There is no question that Macrae committed this terrible act. What would lead such a shy and intelligent boy down this bloody path? And will he hang for his crime? Presented as a collection of documents discovered by the author, His Bloody Project opens with a series of police statements taken from the villagers of Culdie, Ross-shire. They offer conflicting impressions of the accused; one interviewee recalls Macrae as a gentle and quiet child, while another details him as evil and wicked. Chief among the papers is Roderick Macrae’s own memoirs where he outlines the series of events leading up to the murder in eloquent and affectless prose. There follow medical reports, psychological evaluations, a courtroom transcript from the trial, and other documents that throw both Macrae’s motive and his sanity into question. Graeme Macrae Burnet’s multilayered narrative—centered around an unreliable narrator—will keep the reader guessing to the very end. His Bloody Project is a deeply imagined crime novel that is both thrilling and luridly entertaining from an exceptional new voice."

Full Product Details

Author:   Graeme Burnet
Publisher:   Skyhorse Publishing
Imprint:   Arcade Publishing
ISBN:  

9781628728309


ISBN 10:   1628728302
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   28 September 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

-It's only a story -- or is it? Graeme Macrae Burnet makes such masterly use of the narrative form that the horrifying tale he tells in HIS BLOODY PROJECT, a finalist for this year's Man Booker Prize, seems plucked straight out of Scotland's sanguinary historical archives.---Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review -Thought-provoking fiction.---The New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice -[A] powerful, absorbing novel... Fiction authors from Henry James to Vladimir Nabokov to Gillian Flynn have used [an unreliable narrator] to induce ambiguity, heighten suspense and fold an alternative story between the lines of a printed text. Mr. Burnet, a Glasgow author, does all of that and more in this page-turning period account of pathos and violence in 19th-century Scotland... [A] cleverly constructed tale... Has the lineaments of the crime thriller but some of the sociology of a Thomas Hardy novel.---Tom Nolan, Wall Street Journal -. . . recalls William Styron's The Confessions of Nat Turner in the way it portrays an abused people and makes the ensuing violence understandable. . . Bloody Project shows that the power held by landowners and overseers allowed cruelties just like those suffered by the Virginia slaves in Confessions. Halfway between a thriller and a sociological study of an exploitive economic system with eerie echoes to our own time, His Bloody Project is a gripping and relevant read.- --Newsweek -Burnet is a writer of great skill and authority . . . few readers will be able to put down His Bloody Project as it speeds towards a surprising (and ultimately puzzling) conclusion.---Financial Times -His Bloody Project is an ingenious, artful tale of a 19th century triple murder in the Scottish Highlands. Though a novel--and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize--it masquerades as the tale of a true crime, made up of a collection of historical documents supposedly unearthed by the writer, each bit shedding further light on what drove a 17-year-old to kill three people--including an infant--in his small crofting community.---NPR -. . . an intricate, interactive puzzle, a crime novel written, excuse my British, bloody well.---Los Angeles Times -A stellar crime novel and a wrenching historical portrait, HIS BLOODY PROJECT also succeeds at lyrically questioning whether it's possible to know another man's mind--or even desirable. The novel sends out vines in all directions, its characters' tangled motives obscured by tragedy and lies.---Lyndsay Faye, author of Gods of Gotham -A thriller with a fine literary pedigree . . . His Bloody Project- offers an intricate, interactive puzzle, a crime novel written, excuse my British, bloody well.---Steph Cha, Los Angeles Times -It [His Bloody Project] had such an engrossing plot that I couldn't put it down once I started reading it, so it was no surprise that Graeme Macrae Burnet's excellent work was short listed for the Man Booker Prize . . .The interesting and innovative structure used by the author, where you feel like you are reading original historical records, sets the book apart from others of a similar genre and his skillful writing means the reader can't help but empathise with the 'murderer'. In addition to the gripping story, the book gives the reader a fascinating insight into Highland life at the time - its harshness, poverty and brutality. Definitely one of the best books this year.---First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon -Clever and gripping---Library Journal, starred review -Psychologically astute and convincingly grounded in its environment . . . a fine achievement.---The National -Fiendishly readable . . . A psychological thriller masquerading as a slice of true crime. . . The book is also a blackly funny investigation into madness and motivation.---The Gaurdian -. . .sly, poignant, gritty, thought-provoking, and sprinkled with wit.---Publishers Weekly, starred review -I disappeared inside the pages of Graeme Macrae Burnet's His Bloody Project. . . fascinating---The Seattle Times -Burnet has created an eloquent character who will stick with you long after the book is read.---The Seattle Review of Books -Both a horrific tale of violence and a rumination on the societal problems for poor sharecroppers of the era.---TIME -One of the most convincing and engrossing novels of the year.---The Scotsman -A truly ingenious thriller as confusingly multilayered as an Escher staircase---Daily Express -There is no gainstaying the ingenuity with which Burnet has constructed his puzzle. . .--- The Telegraph -A masterful psychological thriller---Ian Stephen, author of A Book of Death and Fish -A gripping crime story, a deeply imagined historical novel, and gloriously written - all in one tour-de-force of a book. Stevensonian - that's the highest praise I can give.---Chris Dolan, Sunday Herald, Books of the Year -Masterful, clever and playful . . . one of the most experimental and assured authors currently writing in Scotland---Louise Hutcheson, A Novel Bookblog -One of the most enjoyable and involving novels you'll read this year---Alistair Braidwood, cots Wha Hae -Presented as a collection of -Documents Relating to the Case of Roderick Macrae, - which took place in 1869, the novel includes the jailhouse memoir of a 17-year-old Scottish Highlander being held in Inverness Castle, awaiting trial for three appalling murders. -It's only a story -- or is it? Graeme Macrae Burnet makes such masterly use of the narrative form that the horrifying tale he tells in HIS BLOODY PROJECT, a finalist for this year's Man Booker Prize, seems plucked straight out of Scotland's sanguinary historical archives. Roderick and his family brave feudal conditions, toiling as tenant farmers on a small allotment, harvesting peat for fuel and scavenging seaweed to fertilize their gardens. It's a hard existence, made even harder by Lachlan Mackenzie, a vindictive constable who systematically strips the Macraes of their livelihood. When father and son bravely take their grievances to the factor, the man charged with running the estate on behalf of the laird, he cruelly dismisses their request to see the regulations they're accused of violating. -The reason you may not 'see' the regulations is because there are no regulations, - he informs them. -You might as well ask to see the air we breathe.- After being goaded beyond endurance, Roderick seeks out his tormentor while carrying a croman (a pickax) and a flaughter (a pointed spade), -merely to discover what would happen if I paid a visit to his house thus armed.- At moments like this, we begin to suspect that Roderick isn't the most trustworthy of narrators. For a -semiliterate peasant, - he has recorded a testament so -sustained and eloquent- that the Edinburgh literati suspect a hoax. Not so Roderick's lawyer, Andrew Sinclair, who marvels at the prisoner's graceful writing and command of language even as he's sickened by the conditions under which people like the Macraes must toil. But the lawyer's defense may not be enough to counter the contemptuous testimony of men like the bigoted prison surgeon, J. Bruce Thomson, who contributes his own sour observations to the medical reports and witness statements presented in court. Thomson's examination of the prisoner confirms his view that criminal behavior is determined by heredity. In Macrae's case, though, what might be inherited is sheer desperation.---Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review


It's only a story -- or is it? Graeme Macrae Burnet makes such masterly use of the narrative form that the horrifying tale he tells in HIS BLOODY PROJECT, a finalist for this year's Man Booker Prize, seems plucked straight out of Scotland's sanguinary historical archives. --Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review <p/> Thought-provoking fiction. --The New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice <p/> A clever structure, convincing narrative voice, and expert evocation of the crofting culture of the Scottish Highlands in the 1860s. --Historical Novels Review (Editors' Choice) <p/> [A] powerful, absorbing novel... Fiction authors from Henry James to Vladimir Nabokov to Gillian Flynn have used [an unreliable narrator] to induce ambiguity, heighten suspense and fold an alternative story between the lines of a printed text. Mr. Burnet, a Glasgow author, does all of that and more in this page-turning period account of pathos and violence in 19th-century Scotland... [A] cleverly constructed tale... Has the lineaments of the crime thriller but some of the sociology of a Thomas Hardy novel. --Tom Nolan, Wall Street Journal <p/>. . . recalls William Styron's The Confessions of Nat Turner in the way it portrays an abused people and makes the ensuing violence understandable. . . Bloody Project shows that the power held by landowners and overseers allowed cruelties just like those suffered by the Virginia slaves in Confessions. Halfway between a thriller and a sociological study of an exploitive economic system with eerie echoes to our own time, His Bloody Project is a gripping and relevant read. --Newsweek <p/> Burnet is a writer of great skill and authority . . . few readers will be able to put down His Bloody Project as it speeds towards a surprising (and ultimately puzzling) conclusion. --Financial Times <p/> His Bloody Project is an ingenious, artful tale of a 19th century triple murder in the Scottish Highlands. Though a novel--and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize--it masquerades as the tale of a true crime, made up of a collection of historical documents supposedly unearthed by the writer, each bit shedding further light on what drove a 17-year-old to kill three people--including an infant--in his small crofting community. --NPR <p/>. . . an intricate, interactive puzzle, a crime novel written, excuse my British, bloody well. --Los Angeles Times <p/> A stellar crime novel and a wrenching historical portrait, HIS BLOODY PROJECT also succeeds at lyrically questioning whether it's possible to know another man's mind--or even desirable. The novel sends out vines in all directions, its characters' tangled motives obscured by tragedy and lies. --Lyndsay Faye, author of Gods of Gotham <p/> A thriller with a fine literary pedigree . . . His Bloody Project offers an intricate, interactive puzzle, a crime novel written, excuse my British, bloody well. --Steph Cha, Los Angeles Times <p/> It [His Bloody Project] had such an engrossing plot that I couldn't put it down once I started reading it, so it was no surprise that Graeme Macrae Burnet's excellent work was short listed for the Man Booker Prize . . .The interesting and innovative structure used by the author, where you feel like you are reading original historical records, sets the book apart from others of a similar genre and his skillful writing means the reader can't help but empathise with the 'murderer'. In addition to the gripping story, the book gives the reader a fascinating insight into Highland life at the time - its harshness, poverty and brutality. Definitely one of the best books this year. --First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon <p/> Clever and gripping --Library Journal, starred review <p/> Psychologically astute and convincingly grounded in its environment . . . a fine achievement. --The National <p/> Fiendishly readable . . . A psychological thriller masquerading as a slice of true crime. . . The book is also a blackly funny investigation into madness and motivation. --The Gaurdian <p/>. . .sly, poignant, gritty, thought-provoking, and sprinkled with wit. --Publishers Weekly, starred review <p/> I disappeared inside the pages of Graeme Macrae Burnet's His Bloody Project. . . fascinating --The Seattle Times <p/> Burnet has created an eloquent character who will stick with you long after the book is read. --The Seattle Review of Books <p/> Both a horrific tale of violence and a rumination on the societal problems for poor sharecroppers of the era. --TIME <p/> One of the most convincing and engrossing novels of the year. --The Scotsman <p/> A truly ingenious thriller as confusingly multilayered as an Escher staircase --Daily Express <p/> There is no gainstaying the ingenuity with which Burnet has constructed his puzzle. . . -- The Telegraph <p/> A masterful psychological thriller --Ian Stephen, author of A Book of Death and Fish <p/> A gripping crime story, a deeply imagined historical novel, and gloriously written - all in one tour-de-force of a book. Stevensonian - that's the highest praise I can give. --Chris Dolan, Sunday Herald, Books of the Year <p/> Masterful, clever and playful . . . one of the most experimental and assured authors currently writing in Scotland --Louise Hutcheson, A Novel Bookblog <p/> One of the most enjoyable and involving novels you'll read this year --Alistair Braidwood, cots Wha Hae <p/> Presented as a collection of Documents Relating to the Case of Roderick Macrae, which took place in 1869, the novel includes the jailhouse memoir of a 17-year-old Scottish Highlander being held in Inverness Castle, awaiting trial for three appalling murders. <p/> It's only a story -- or is it? Graeme Macrae Burnet makes such masterly use of the narrative form that the horrifying tale he tells in HIS BLOODY PROJECT, a finalist for this year's Man Booker Prize, seems plucked straight out of Scotland's sanguinary historical archives. Roderick and his family brave feudal conditions, toiling as tenant farmers on a small allotment, harvesting peat for fuel and scavenging seaweed to fertilize their gardens. It's a hard existence, made even harder by Lachlan Mackenzie, a vindictive constable who systematically strips the Macraes of their livelihood. When father and son bravely take their grievances to the factor, the man charged with running the estate on behalf of the laird, he cruelly dismisses their request to see the regulations they're accused of violating. The reason you may not 'see' the regulations is because there are no regulations, he informs them. You might as well ask to see the air we breathe. <p/>After being goaded beyond endurance, Roderick seeks out his tormentor while carrying a croman (a pickax) and a flaughter (a pointed spade), merely to discover what would happen if I paid a visit to his house thus armed. At moments like this, we begin to suspect that Roderick isn't the most trustworthy of narrators. <p/>For a semiliterate peasant, he has recorded a testament so sustained and eloquent that the Edinburgh literati suspect a hoax. Not so Roderick's lawyer, Andrew Sinclair, who marvels at the prisoner's graceful writing and command of language even as he's sickened by the conditions under which people like the Macraes must toil. But the lawyer's defense may not be enough to counter the contemptuous testimony of men like the bigoted prison surgeon, J. Bruce Thomson, who contributes his own sour observations to the medical reports and witness statements presented in court. Thomson's examination of the prisoner confirms his view that criminal behavior is determined by heredity. In Macrae's case, though, what might be inherited is sheer desperation. --Marilyn Stasio, The New York Times Book Review


It's only a story -- or is it? Graeme Macrae Burnet makes such masterly use of the narrative form that the horrifying tale he tells in HIS BLOODY PROJECT, a finalist for this year's Man Booker Prize, seems plucked straight out of Scotland's sanguinary historical archives. --Marilyn Stasio, <em>The New York Times Book Review</em> Thought-provoking fiction. --The New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice [A] powerful, absorbing novel... Fiction authors from Henry James to Vladimir Nabokov to Gillian Flynn have used [an unreliable narrator] to induce ambiguity, heighten suspense and fold an alternative story between the lines of a printed text. Mr. Burnet, a Glasgow author, does all of that and more in this page-turning period account of pathos and violence in 19th-century Scotland... [A] cleverly constructed tale... Has the lineaments of the crime thriller but some of the sociology of a Thomas Hardy novel. --Tom Nolan, <em>Wall Street Journal</em> . . . recalls William Styron's The Confessions of Nat Turner in the way it portrays an abused people and makes the ensuing violence understandable. . . Bloody Project shows that the power held by landowners and overseers allowed cruelties just like those suffered by the Virginia slaves in Confessions. Halfway between a thriller and a sociological study of an exploitive economic system with eerie echoes to our own time, His Bloody Project is a gripping and relevant read. --<em>Newsweek</em> Burnet is a writer of great skill and authority . . . few readers will be able to put down His Bloody Project as it speeds towards a surprising (and ultimately puzzling) conclusion. --<em>Financial Times</em> <em>His Bloody Project </em>is an ingenious, artful tale of a 19th century triple murder in the Scottish Highlands. Though a novel--and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize--it masquerades as the tale of a true crime, made up of a collection of historical documents supposedly unearthed by the writer, each bit shedding further light on what drove a 17-year-old to kill three people--including an infant--in his small crofting community. --<em>NPR</em> . . . an intricate, interactive puzzle, a crime novel written, excuse my British, bloody well. --<em>Los Angeles Times</em> A stellar crime novel and a wrenching historical portrait, HIS BLOODY PROJECT also succeeds at lyrically questioning whether it's possible to know another man's mind--or even desirable. The novel sends out vines in all directions, its characters' tangled motives obscured by tragedy and lies. --Lyndsay Faye, author of <em>Gods of Gotham </em> A thriller with a fine literary pedigree . . . His Bloody Project offers an intricate, interactive puzzle, a crime novel written, excuse my British, bloody well. --Steph Cha, <em>Los Angeles Times</em> It [His Bloody Project] had such an engrossing plot that I couldn't put it down once I started reading it, so it was no surprise that Graeme Macrae Burnet's excellent work was short listed for the Man Booker Prize . . .The interesting and innovative structure used by the author, where you feel like you are reading original historical records, sets the book apart from others of a similar genre and his skillful writing means the reader can't help but empathise with the 'murderer'. In addition to the gripping story, the book gives the reader a fascinating insight into Highland life at the time - its harshness, poverty and brutality. Definitely one of the best books this year. --First Minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon Clever and gripping --<em>Library Journal</em>, starred review Psychologically astute and convincingly grounded in its environment . . . a fine achievement. --<em>The National </em> Fiendishly readable . . . A psychological thriller masquerading as a slice of true crime. . . The book is also a blackly funny investigation into madness and motivation. --<em>The Gaurdian </em> . . .sly, poignant, gritty, thought-provoking, and sprinkled with wit. --<em>Publishers Weekly</em>, starred review I disappeared inside the pages of Graeme Macrae Burnet's His Bloody Project. . . fascinating --<em>The Seattle Times</em> Burnet has created an eloquent character who will stick with you long after the book is read. --<em>The Seattle Review of Books</em> Both a horrific tale of violence and a rumination on the societal problems for poor sharecroppers of the era. --<em>TIME</em> One of the most convincing and engrossing novels of the year. --<em>The Scotsman</em> A truly ingenious thriller as confusingly multilayered as an Escher staircase --<em>Daily Express</em> There is no gainstaying the ingenuity with which Burnet has constructed his puzzle. . . -- <em>The Telegraph</em> A masterful psychological thriller --Ian Stephen, author of<em> A Book of Death and Fish</em> A gripping crime story, a deeply imagined historical novel, and gloriously written - all in one tour-de-force of a book. Stevensonian - that's the highest praise I can give. --Chris Dolan, <em>Sunday Herald</em>, Books of the Year Masterful, clever and playful . . . one of the most experimental and assured authors currently writing in Scotland --Louise Hutcheson, <em>A Novel Bookblog</em> One of the most enjoyable and involving novels you'll read this year --Alistair Braidwood, <em>cots Wha Hae</em> Presented as a collection of Documents Relating to the Case of Roderick Macrae, which took place in 1869, the novel includes the jailhouse memoir of a 17-year-old Scottish Highlander being held in Inverness Castle, awaiting trial for three appalling murders. It's only a story -- or is it? Graeme Macrae Burnet makes such masterly use of the narrative form that the horrifying tale he tells in HIS BLOODY PROJECT, a finalist for this year's Man Booker Prize, seems plucked straight out of Scotland's sanguinary historical archives. Roderick and his family brave feudal conditions, toiling as tenant farmers on a small allotment, harvesting peat for fuel and scavenging seaweed to fertilize their gardens. It's a hard existence, made even harder by Lachlan Mackenzie, a vindictive constable who systematically strips the Macraes of their livelihood. When father and son bravely take their grievances to the factor, the man charged with running the estate on behalf of the laird, he cruelly dismisses their request to see the regulations they're accused of violating. The reason you may not 'see' the regulations is because there are no regulations, he informs them. You might as well ask to see the air we breathe. After being goaded beyond endurance, Roderick seeks out his tormentor while carrying a croman (a pickax) and a flaughter (a pointed spade), merely to discover what would happen if I paid a visit to his house thus armed. At moments like this, we begin to suspect that Roderick isn't the most trustworthy of narrators. For a semiliterate peasant, he has recorded a testament so sustained and eloquent that the Edinburgh literati suspect a hoax. Not so Roderick's lawyer, Andrew Sinclair, who marvels at the prisoner's graceful writing and command of language even as he's sickened by the conditions under which people like the Macraes must toil. But the lawyer's defense may not be enough to counter the contemptuous testimony of men like the bigoted prison surgeon, J. Bruce Thomson, who contributes his own sour observations to the medical reports and witness statements presented in court. Thomson's examination of the prisoner confirms his view that criminal behavior is determined by heredity. In Macrae's case, though, what might be inherited is sheer desperation. --Marilyn Stasio, <em>The New York Times Book Review</em>


Author Information

Graeme Macrae Burnet has established a reputation for smart and literary mystery writing with his highly praised first novel, The Disappearance of Adele Bedeau, which was featured in the List’s Top Scottish Books of 2014. He was born and brought up in Kilmarnock and has lived in Prague, Bordeaux, Porto, and London. He now lives in Glasgow, Scotland.

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