Napoleon of Crime by Ben MacIntyre

Napoleon of Crime

by Ben MacIntyre

In the 1870s, Adam Worth left a life of professional deserting from the US army and entered into a life of full-scale crime. He soon became an orchestrator of thefts and cons throughout 19th-century America and Britain, and ringleader of the largest crime network in the world. He was famed, among other triumphs, for stealing Gainsborough's great portrait of the Duchess of Devonshire - and later for returning it. Yet, for many years, he was considered by many to be the perfect Victorian gentleman and, even in his criminal capacity, abhorred violence and was loyal to a fault. Conan Doyle based the character of Holmes' great adversary Moriarty on Adam Worth, who had his own Holmes in the shape of William Pinkerton of Pinkerton's detective agency, from whose slogan "the eye that never sleeps" originated the term "private eye". Their parallel careers form the basis of this book.

Reviewed by jamiereadthis on

4 of 5 stars

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This book was fantastic. The story and the writing of it. Fiction should remember how great real life can be; the last few novels I’ve read, especially crime novels, can’t touch the characters who live on these pages. Especially the lifelong friendship between Adam Worth, gentleman thief, and the infamous Robert Pinkerton.

If I ever do write a novel, it will probably be some sort of fanfic— homage, let’s say— to the story in here. In other words, not the first of the novels inspired by Worth’s life.

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  • 6 March, 2019: Reviewed