Ghostwalk

Rebecca Stott

Book - 2007

After the mysterious drowning of his mother Elizabeth Vogelsang, who was writing a controversial biography of Isacc Newton, Cameron Brown recruits his former lover to complete the book. This plunges her to into probing two series of murders, the 17th century murders of several who stood between Newton and his studies and present day targets of those who offend the an animal rights group.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Spiegel & Grau c2007.
Language
English
Main Author
Rebecca Stott (-)
Edition
1st U.S. ed
Item Description
"A novel."
Physical Description
304 p.
ISBN
9780385521062
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

THE intellectual thriller, dripping with blood and erudition, was invented by Poe, refined by Borges and Umberto Eco, and eventually attained its popular apotheosis in "The Da Vinci Code." By now, its cogs and pulleys are so familiar that seasoned readers don't flinch at time travel, cryptography, a famous ghost or two and the rest of the shopworn gadgetry of the genre. Rebecca Stott's intricately plotted "Ghostwalk" begins in the orthodox fashion, with a corpse, a clue and an armchair detective. But it also has a scholarly authority and imaginative sparkle all too rare in upscale pulp - or, for that matter, any kind of writing. In this mesmerizing first novel, Stott, a historian of science at Anglia Ruskin University in England, has drawn on the traditional resource of historical fiction to fill tantalizing gaps in the archival record. Like Matthew Pearl in "The Poe Shadow," she attempts to shed new light on the mysterious circumstances of a long-cold case. The suspicious deaths at the core of "Ghostwalk" occurred in and around Trinity College, Cambridge, during the 17th century, when the plague was at its peak and Isaac Newton was solving every scientific puzzle in sight. Newton, the red-robed Lucasian professor of mathematics who discovered, among other things, the spectrum of light and the rules of gravitation, is the pivotal figure around whom Stott's double plot turns. As the novel opens, an idiosyncratic Cambridge historian named Elizabeth Vogelsang has been researching Newton's manifold ties to alchemy, the esoteric precursor of modern science. "She was using Newton as a way of showing how all those European alchemical networks and secret societies hung together" and "wanted to challenge that myth of Newton as a lone genius, working completely in isolation." When Vogelsang's drowned body turns up, Ophelia-like, in the "river-riven landscape" of the Cambridge fens, with a glass prism in her tightly clenched fist, it's clear that she had stumbled onto something bigger than 17th-century alchemical networks. Since Newton's extensive investment in alchemy remains something of a scandal to those who wish to view him as a beacon of the Enlightenment, Vogelsang's research project is perfectly plausible. Or so it seems to Lydia Brooke, a freelance writer and former lover of Vogelsang's son, Cameron Brown. A distinguished neuroscientist, Cameron hires Lydia to complete his mother's unfinished opus. As she pores over the manuscript in Vogelsang's riverside studio, Lydia realizes that the necessary detective work isn't just scholarly. Strange flickers of light appear on the walls at all hours. Vogelsang's cat, Pepys, is ritually murdered. It's increasingly clear that someone doesn't want Lydia to finish her work, as she ventures down the "ghostwalk" to the 17th century. Meanwhile, she resumes her passionate affair with the dashing and inconveniently married Cameron. The trap-door plot of "Ghostwalk" involves an occult connection ("not a simple causal relationship," Lydia muses, "but something as delicate as a web, one of those fine white skeins you see around the tips of grass stems in the spring when the dew is heavy") between Elizabeth Vogelsang's untimely demise and the violent deaths of five men during the period when Newton was establishing his reputation at Trinity. A kindred skein connects the alchemical cabal of the 17th century with outbreaks of violence in post-9/11 Cambridge, "a city of keys and locked doors and private secret inner courtyards." Animal-rights activists lurk in the shadows, along with whatever is brewing in the top-secret neuroscience labs where Cameron experiments on rats and sends secret text-messages to his lover. Two kinds of implausibility threaten thrillers like "Ghostwalk." One is bogus erudition; the other is rickety romance. Some readers of "The Da Vinci Code" could never suspend their disbelief beyond a Harvard professor of "religious symbology." Rebecca Stott, whose previous books include a vivid biographical study of Charles Darwin called "Darwin and the Barnacle," is perfectly at home in academic scholarship, and her 17th-century characters and settings are solidly grounded in fact. The pages she includes in "Ghostwalk" from Elizabeth Vogelsang's fictional manuscript on Newton, replete with footnotes and illustrations, are utterly convincing. The first extract traces the journey of a prism made by master glassmakers in Venice to the young Isaac Newton, "who had wandered that morning among the glass sellers of Cheapside asking for information about glassmaking and lens grinding." Armed with his prism, Newton split "the rainbow-freighted ray" of light into its constituent colors, and "coined the word spectrum, or ghost, to describe the lozenge shape that glowed on his wall." Stott persuasively conveys the uncanny world of waking dream in which intellectual discoveries are sometimes made. Holed up in her riverside studio, Lydia stumbles upon an extraordinary resemblance between Newton's drawing of his own eyeball being prodded by a needle (his excruciating way of testing how vision and pressure are intertwined) and an early map of Cambridge with an oval island in the River Cam. "Turning the map so that the oval lay to the left of the city ... the map of Cambridge, ringed by water, suddenly seemed to me a reversed image of Newton's drawing of his own eyeball." This visual rhyme, "one image echoing the other," is so extraordinary that one wonders whether Stott has made a real contribution to Newton scholarship. Her evocation of Newton's "plague-stricken" Cambridge is indelible: "For a man sleepless, half-starved, and with his eyes burned and exhausted from experiment ... the city must have seemed like a vision from Revelations." THE clandestine romance between Lydia Brooke and Cameron Brown bookish names that seem culled from some forgotten Victorian novel - flits among text messages and other peripherals of our digital age. Much of the narrative is in Lydia's voice and archly addressed to Brown, the scientist in the 21st century whose unsavory career is meant to echo Newton's. Compared with the solidity of Vogelsang's pages about Cambridge during the plague years, these passionate exchanges in the present can seem a bit weightless and cloying: "'No, I won't kiss you,' I said, and kissed you. 'No, and a hundred times, no.'" Yet Lydia, a bohemian on the fringes of academia, is a poignantly recognizable type - a perfect foil for Brown, the clever and distracted professional man on the make. In his story "Death and the Compass," Borges gussied up a tawdry tale of revenge with, as he put it, "a dead rabbi, a compass, an 18th-century sect, a Greek word, a dagger and the diamond-shaped patterns on a paint-store wall." Rebecca Stott, with her own spectral patterns on the wall, has accomplished something distinctively fresh with what she calls "a grubby little set of murders in Cambridge." Along the way, she manages to invoke both the non-causal entanglements of quantum physics and the paranoid conspiracies of Pynchon and DeLillo. Her home terrain, however, is the river-riven landscape of the human heart. Rebecca Stott's trap-door plot connects a modern murder with five deaths in 17th-century Cambridge. Christopher Benfey, the Mellon professor of English at Mount Holyoke College, writes about art for Slate.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 27, 2009]
Review by Booklist Review

If moments in time become entangled in the same way that photons become entangled, then there might be strange connections between the past and the present. Stott's mesmerizing, intellectually challenging first novel explores one of these entanglements. It begins when a Cambridge historian, Elizabeth Vogelsang, is found dead in the river Cam, just as she was about to finish her unconventional study of Isaac Newton's infatuation with alchemy. Lydia Brooke is asked by Elizabeth's son, Cameron, her former lover, to finish the book. Soon the affair has been rekindled, and Lydia, ensconced in Elizabeth's studio, is experiencing all variety of otherworldly phenomena: movements of light across the walls, vanished papers, even the possible interference in her work of a seventeenth-century rival of Newton's. Can a series of Cambridge murders in the present, all apparently connected to Cameron's scientific research, be linked to a similar series of deaths in the seventeenth century that opened the door for Newton to win a professorship? Stott jumps dexterously between present and past, bringing the world of Newton and his alchemical colleagues to vivid life and offering tantalizingly believable explanations for the cojoining of time and space. This daring novel works on multiple levels: as thriller, as love story, as ghost story, as historical speculation. No novel since Iain Pears' Instance of the Fingerpost (1998) has so vigorously stirred the cauldron of conflict that was seventeenth-century England. --Bill Ott Copyright 2007 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

British historian Stott makes a stunning debut with this hypnotic and intelligent thriller, the first fiction release of a new Random House imprint. The mysterious drowning death of Elizabeth Vogelsang, a Cambridge University scholar who was almost finished writing a controversial biography of Isaac Newton, leads her son, Cameron Brown, to recruit Lydia Brooke, his former lover, to complete the book. That request plunges Brooke into probing two ostensibly separate series of murders: one in the 17th century claimed the lives of several who stood between Newton and the fellowship he needed to continue his studies at Cambridge; the other in the present day appears to target those who have offended a radical animal rights group. Brooke's work may be haunted by a ghost from Newton's time who guides her to a radical reinterpretation of the role of alchemy and the supernatural in Newton's life. Much more than a clever whodunit, this taut, atmospheric novel with its twisty interconnections between past and present will leave readers hoping Stott has many more stories in her future. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Isaac Newton joins Dracula and Leonardo da Vinci as the latest historical figure to show up in an academic thriller, but will it approach the popularity of Elizabeth Kostova's The Historian or Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code? In this debut novel from British historian Stott (Darwin and the Barnacle), screenwriter Lydia Brooke is hired by her ex-lover, Cameron Brown, to ghostwrite his recently murdered mother's biography of Isaac Newton. Lydia then becomes entangled in a mystery whose threads connect present-day animal-rights activists and the ghosts of 17th-century alchemists. Lydia herself is something of a cipher, but the minor characters are quirky and engaging. Stott clearly did a lot of research on subjects as far-ranging as optics, neuroscience, glassblowing, sleepwalking, mediums, animal testing, and the workings of outdoor markets both today and 300 years ago. Unfortunately, all this information, plus loving descriptions of everything from mushrooms to text-messaging, tends to obscure the plot until it's unclear who did what to whom and why. Still, the subject matter and excellent cover art will attract readers. Recommended for libraries where this genre is popular. [This is one of the first titles to be published by Random House's new Spiegel & Grau division.-Ed.]-Jenne Bergstrom, San Diego Cty. Lib. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In Stott's fiction debut (Darwin and the Barnacle, 2003, etc.), writer Lydia Brooke agrees to complete the unfinished manuscript left behind by her former lover's dead mother, and she enters a world where the dead do not go gently into the night. Cambridge University's Trinity College provides the setting for this spellbinding tale that intertwines a dark 17th-century journey with the present. Lydia, a successful writer, returns to Cambridge to attend the funeral of Elizabeth Vogelsang, whose fascination with Sir Isaac Newton led her to write a potentially controversial book about the scientific and mathematical genius. But Elizabeth's investigation into Newton's life and his practice of alchemy has gone wrong. Found dead in the river with a prism clutched in her hand, Elizabeth leaves behind a meticulously researched manuscript, missing its final chapter. Cameron Brown, Elizabeth's brilliant neuroscientist son and Lydia's former lover, compels Lydia to ghostwrite the last chapter and finish his mother's book. Drawn to both Cameron and the project, Lydia acquiesces and moves into Elizabeth's cottage, with its strange, unexplained lights and colors that appear to come from nowhere. Here she meets an odd girl named Will and an even odder friend of Elizabeth's who claims to speak with the dead. Lydia also pursues a relationship with the married Cameron, who is stalked by a violent animal-rights group that objects to his use of laboratory animals. Stott embroils Lydia in a past steeped in the mysticism of alchemy and plagued by black ambition. Intrigue from Newton's past creeps into the present, eventually sweeping both Lydia and Cameron into a series of climactic events suspended somewhere between life and death. Stott's compelling style acts as a counterpoint to the scientific and historical components of this haunting literary mystery/thriller. Stott skillfully binds fact with fiction in an insightful story that surprises and intrigues. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

One Over the last two years, as I have tried to tease out the truths from the untruths in that series of events that seeped out through Elizabeth's death, like lava moving upwards and outwards through salt water from a tear in the seabed, I have had to be you several times, Cameron Brown, in order to claw myself towards some kind of coherence. Sometimes it was--is--easy to imagine the world through your eyes, terribly possible to imagine walking through the garden that afternoon in those moments before you found your mother's body in the river. After all, for a long time, all that time we were lovers, it was difficult to tell where your skin ended and mine began. That was part of the trouble for Lydia Brooke and Cameron Brown. Lack of distance became--imperceptibly--a violent entanglement. So this is for you, Cameron, and yes, it is also for me, Lydia Brooke, because perhaps, in putting all these pieces together properly, I will be able to step out from your skin and back into mine. Alongside Elizabeth's body floating in red in the river, there are other places where this story needs to start, places I can see now but wouldn't have seen then, other beginnings which were all connected. Another death, one that took place around midnight on the 5th of January, 1665. That night, Richard Greswold, a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, had opened a door onto a dark, unlit landing above a staircase in Trinity. A draught caught the flame from the lamp in his hand, twisting and elongating the shadows around him. As a thin stream of blood began to trickle from one, then both of his nostrils, he raised the back of his hand and wiped it across his cheek, smearing the blood into streaks, and fell forward, very slowly, into air, through the palest of moon shadows cast through casement windows. He fell heavily, his body twisting and beating against the steps and walls. The lamp fell too and bounced, making a metallic counterpoint to the thuds of flesh on wood. By morning the blood from the wound on Richard Greswold's head had run through and across the uneven cracks of the stone flagging on which he died, making a brown map like the waterways across the Fens to the north, the college porter said, prying a key--the key to the garden--from the dead man's clenched fist. Encrusted blood, as thick as fen mud. Greswold's death was bound up with Elizabeth's. She came to know that before she died, but we didn't. Two Cambridge deaths, separated by three centuries, but inseparable, shadowing each other. Richard Greswold. Elizabeth Vogelsang. Elizabeth Vogelsang drowned in September, 2002, the first of three deaths that would become the subject of a police investigation four months later. The police took a ragged testimony from me, which I gave in answer to the questions they asked and which were recorded on tape in a windowless room in the basement of the Parkside Police Station by a Detective Sergeant Cuff on the 16th of January, 2003. "All the interview rooms are occupied this morning, Dr. Brooke," he said, struggling to find the right key as I followed him down grey corridors. "So we'll have to use the central investigation room. I'm afraid it's not ideal, but it is at least empty this morning. There's a staff training morning--health and safety. We have about an hour. This is not a formal interview, you understand. We'll do that later. Just a chat." "I don't know whether what I have to tell you will take an hour," I said. My nerves were jangled. I wasn't sleeping. I was still waking in the middle of the night angry with you, and with me, but I had enough self-possession to know that I would have to be careful and alert here at the Parkside Police Station. Very alert. They had arrested Lily Ridler. "We will have to see you again, Dr. Brooke, without doubt. You will be central to our enquiries." That's how I came to see another version, their version. Well, not quite see , but glimpse . The central investigation room at the Parkside Police Station was filled with filing cabinets and four desks with exaggerated curves sweeping in different directions; over to the right, a magnetic whiteboard ran the length of one entire windowless wall. Cuff pulled up a swivel chair for me on the other side of his desk, carefully clearing away papers and notes into a drawer and locking it. A collection of objects and photographs had been attached to the whiteboard with magnets. Curled around those objects were a series of questions, names, lists, and arrows in coloured marker pens in different hands. I couldn't see very much from where I was sitting, so when Cuff went to retrieve a file from another room, I slipped the digital camera out of my briefcase and photographed it. A risky act driven by nothing but a terrible, bereaved curiosity. A white magnetic board written on in different hands in different colours and a series of photographs--three dead bodies, one woman drowned in a red coat, two men with their faces slashed, a wall of graffiti, several photographs of mutilated cats and horses, the house at Landing Lane, a photograph of Lily Ridler next to some other people I didn't recognise--animal activists, I assume--and a photograph of a pile of shredded paper. When I call up the photo on my laptop and increase the resolution I can pick out details. If you go close enough you can just see that the blue pen lists two of the murder scenes: Staircase E of Trinity College and St. Edward's Passage. And if you go very close, right up into the right-hand corner--it took me a while to spot this--there's a photograph of me next to a photograph of Sarah. It was the photograph of me that you carried in your mobile phone, filed away carefully, so that no one would find it. The one you took on Holkham Beach. They must have gone through all the files in your mobile to find that. Underneath someone had written my name. Lydia Brooke. Yes, that whiteboard was the sketchy beginning of the police version of what came to be known as the Cambridge murders. Murders that would be discussed in Parliament and produced as evidence to support proposed draconian measures in the Serious Organised Crime and Police Bill, and which were finally instrumental in changing British law. Yes, we were making legal history but, of course, we didn't know that then. That first conversation did take the best part of an hour because Cuff had so many questions about my relationship with you, what I had been doing in Elizabeth's house, how I had come to know the family, when I had last seen you, what we had talked about, what you had been wearing, and the context for that message I left on your phone. Cuff, who affected a relaxed nonchalance composed, I guessed, to make me drop my guard, summarised my answers and wrote them all out on lined police paper before reading them back to me in a continuous story, which he had somehow made from my fragmented answers. I signed it as a "true account." A few months later I tried to put together a more coherent description for the lawyer representing Lily Ridler in the court case. She asked me to write down everything I remembered that might have been relevant to the case, from Elizabeth's funeral to the days of the trial. I had no ambivalence then about its truth or about its beginning and ending. That came later. I typed it out in Kit's study looking down over the summer garden, two hours a day, until it seemed about right. Although it read sequentially, I didn't write it sequentially. Memory doesn't work like that. I kept remembering things as I wrote, things I had thought until then were inconsequential, which might have been "relevant," so I went back and tucked them into the story--little details, thoughts, surmisings, speculations. I've always wondered how the two stories--the ragged one I put together in answer to Cuff's questions and the one I wrote in Kit's study for Patricia Dibb--ended up being so different. It wasn't as if I falsified anything. For the police my story was only part of a much bigger narrative, made up of perhaps twenty witness accounts, so the prosecution knitted together all those reports and circumstantial evidence in chronological order, and bit by bit against and between them, my story got pulled in several directions. When set together with all those others, my story took on a different shape, and it was the composite version, filtered, dragged, and kneaded, that the jury agreed to. It was pretty damning once they'd finished with it, damning enough to convict Lily Ridler of murder and send her to prison for the rest of her life. A tight story, she said to me the last time I saw her. Impenetrable now. A closed case. The story kept on changing. When the court issued a press statement and the newspapers distilled it back down to the size they wanted, with all the appropriately dramatic, suspenseful moments, it fitted neatly into columns of small type. One journalist even made a time line of events in which the two murders were simply a notch in the straight passing of time through Lily's life, like a single-track train with stations that began with her birth and ended with her arrest. She was charged with three murders and sixteen acts of unlawful animal killing and mutilation, but because they couldn't pin Elizabeth's death on her, she was convicted of only two murders. Once they'd added those killings to the time line and filled in the details about her grandfather and her parents, Lily Ridler had become a psychopath, a monster. Now, nearly two years later, Lily is dead. So if we thought it was finished, we know it isn't now. The ghosts have not been laid to rest after all, you see, not yours and not hers. If they were to question me again I think I would have to say that I see it differently now--the connections, I mean. Time does that. There were missing parts then, a historical dimension that no one asked any questions about and which, then, I could only half see. What was missing? The seventeenth century. But how do you say that to a policeman who has just switched on his tape recorder to record the words "Parkside Police Station, 16 January, 2003, interview with Dr. Lydia Brooke"? How do you say, "There's a missing witness account and a missing suspect...Sergeant Cuff, the seventeenth century is missing. And you need to talk to a man called Mr. F." How do you tell him that you think there's a link between a female scholar found drowned in a river in Cambridge and a man who fell down a staircase nearby three hundred years earlier? Not a simple causal relationship but something as delicate as a web, one of those fine white skeins you see around the tips of grass stems in the spring when the dew is heavy. A crow has just flown off my study roof, launched itself into the air to my left down over the garden, just as the right-hand corner of my map of Cambridge has curled itself noisily away from the wall. The syncopated sounds of the scurrying of crow's feet on roof tiles and the curling of old paper is enough to make one think that there might be something else in the room beside me as I write. Which of you restless people is it? What do you want with my story? No. If Elizabeth were here she would say that history is less like a skein of silk and more like a palimpsest--time layered upon time so that one buried layer leaks into the one above. Or like a stain in an old stone wall that seeps through the plaster. What would Cuff have said or done if I had told him that he needed to know about the man who fell down the stairs of Trinity College on the 5th of January 1665, the fall that stained the floor, the stain that leaked through Elizabeth's life and Lily's, that held us all together, in thrall? Cuff would not have known the significance of the date--1665--or at least I don't think he would have done. Perhaps 1666 would have rung some bells: the year the Great Plague abated in England and the Fire of London ravaged the capital in its wake. He might have remembered that from his secondary school history classes. If I had told Cuff about Greswold and about Isaac Newton's complicated friendship with a Mr. F., he wouldn't have written any of it down. He wouldn't have considered it relevant. A man falling through air and shadows in Trinity College, 1665. A secret friendship between two young men, forged in alchemical and mathematical calculations. How could that have any bearing on a series of murders in Cambridge that took place in 2002 and 2003? If I had suggested that, Cuff would have raised one of his thick black eyebrows and his pen would have paused in midair. Elizabeth Vogelsang would have understood. Cuff wouldn't. Lily went to prison because the seventeenth century was missing from her court records, from her story. Her time line needed to be longer, much longer, and there were many sidelines and tracks, twistings and turnings and yes, it was a labyrinth, a skein of silk that began to weave itself in 1665, 339 years ago. I've been thinking about labyrinths this summer. Ariadne giving Theseus the thread so that he could find his way back out of the labyrinth, away from the black void of the flesh-eating Minotaur. Unravellings have to start somewhere. Now that I see, for the first time, how connected everything is, I know that the threads between Isaac Newton and us were all attached, like the ground elder under Kit's soil. That summer in which I wrote my story and yours for Patricia Dibb, Kit and I declared war on the ground elder that had taken over her flower beds at Sturton Street. As we began to dig, we could see how each of those separate plants, uncurling above ground, was joined to a great network of root systems underground. There was no point in digging up part of it; you had to pull up the whole thing, and if you didn't, it would start reaching out again in the wet darkness of the soil, another green leaf curling up a week or so later. Grace, Kit's elderly neighbour, leaning over the chicken wire fence, uttered her warnings about the impossibility of ever killing it off. She had spent fifty years trying, she said. Break those roots just once, she said, and the wound on the root will make scores of new shoots. Excerpted from Ghostwalk by Rebecca Stott All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.