Violence breaks out among a circle of literary forgers.
This final installment of a trilogy that began with The Forgers (2014) opens with prolific forger Henry Slader waking to discover he has been buried alive in a shallow grave. Struggling to remember who he is and how got there, he manages to claw his way to the surface. When the cobwebs have cleared, he resumes his efforts to blackmail his nemesis, convicted forger Will, with incriminating photos of a murder Will committed in the past. This time, Slader deals with Will’s brilliant forger daughter Nicole—even though she was the one who whacked Slader in the head with a shovel and participated in his burial, assuming he was dead. From Nicole, a Mary Shelley specialist with “Banksy bravado,” Slader demands forgeries of letters written by the Frankenstein author. She agrees to his terms but encrypts a message in them for a document expert to discover, indicating they are fakes. Grounded in scholarship, the novel does more with literary references than is usually the case in popular fiction. It’s a novel in constant movement, beginning in upstate New York and concluding with high drama at Shelley’s grave in England. Bad things happen to a lot of people, but for Slader, it’s all worth it: “In heady moments he wondered if his accomplishments [as a forger] weren’t comparable to those of the authors themselves.” For Nicole, the counterfeit pages “can bring real happiness to someone who believes they own, say, a copy of Sense and Sensibility inscribed by Jane [Austen] to her sister, Cassandra.” Reading the book, of course, would add to the pleasure.
An entertaining blend of detective thriller and literary investigation.