Murder on Exchange Alley
In A Conspiracy of Paper, David Liss describes how money and murder changed the financial face of the world as he focuses on white collar crime in 1719 London. A Conspiracy of Paper is not a literal historical novel, however, but a lively, imaginative one that involves the South Sea Bubble, a battle for control of trading rights in South America and the South Seas. The protagonist is Benjamin Weaver, a Jewish ex-boxer known as the Lion of Judah who abandoned the ring to become an eighteenth-century Sam Spade, someone who retrieves stolen property and brings the thieves to justice, a lucrative but dangerous occupation. Weaver, whose real name is Lienzo, has been estranged from his own family for many years and he has no desire to mend any broken fences. Not even his father's death, reportedly an accidental one, can bring Weaver back within the family fold. The plot of this book centers on two crimes. The first involves the pretentious William Balfour. Although Balfour's father's death has been declared a suicide, Balfour, himself, believes it was murder and he engages Weaver to investigate, telling him that Weaver's own father's death might in some mysterious way be linked to that of the elder Balfour's. Weaver finds the large fee Balfour has agreed to pay far more enticing than any link to his own father could ever be. The other crime involves a baronet, Sir Owen Nettleton, who wants Weaver to recover some incriminating letters that were stolen from him during a liaison with a prostitute. An incident that occurs while Weaver is busy tracking down the stolen letters will have repercussions that will haunt Weaver for some time to come. The connection between Nettleton and Balfour, although nebulous at first, becomes clearer as time goes on. So does the connection to Weaver's own father's death. During the course of his investigation, Weaver must interact with his own family once again and this brings two wonderfully-drawn characters into the book: Weaver's uncle and his brother's beautiful and restless widow. It also adds yet another complication to a story that grows ever more complicated by the page. A wonderful character himself, we come to really care about Weaver as he mixes politics with murder and places his life in peril. Liss, himself a doctoral candidate in English at Columbia University, has a fine eye for detail and we really feel as though we are back in eighteenth-century London as Weaver moves from the coffee houses to the brothels to the financial district to the depths of London's rag-and-tatter street life. The absolute division between the Jewish and Christian residents, as well as the overt anti-Semitism is well-detailed as is the corruption existing in the government. Liss also manages to duplicate the speaking and writing style of the period and to reconstruct English history with amazing accuracy. I am sure many readers will compare this novel to Caleb Carr's The Alienist and most will probably prefer the latter. A Conspiracy of Paper, however, is still a wonderful and engrossing undertaking through London of three centuries ago. It is a mix of intrigue, murder and financial shenanigans that almost any reader will find fascinating.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback.
Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.