His Bloody Project. Documents relating to the case of Roderick Macrae by Graeme Macrae Burnet

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Text, 2016. ISBN 9781925498257
(Age: Capable senior students) Recommended. Shortlisted for the Man Booker prize 2016. His Bloody Project is clearly subtitled as a novel, which is a useful guide as the book has the authenticity of a historical investigation. It has also been described as a 'crime story', that is, a story about a crime and not a 'crime novel'. The text is comprised of a number of sets of documents, including reports from the crime scene, the accused's thoughts written in prison, an account from a psychiatrist engaged to assess the accused and press reports written during and after the trial. The accused is Roderick Macrae, the son of a poor crofter living in a remote village in the Scottish Highlands in 1869. The reader learns that Roderick, aged 16, has admitted to brutally murdering the constable of the village. The crime scene documents detail events seen by a number of villagers who are all shocked and some of whom are sympathetic to Roderick. They agree that he was seen walking to the constable's house with several agricultural implements and returning covered in blood. However, attitudes to the boy differ. The school teacher attests that Roderick was a clever student, a neighbour that he was treated too severely by his father, but the minister that he was wicked and retarded. Roderick's statement is written in gaol at the behest of his lawyer. The reader is given a clear picture of the hardship and deprivation that was part of Roderick's life, though Roderick does not acknowledge that his own circumstances are any more difficult than anyone else's. Roderick's father is a dour, punitive man who seems to accept and administer hardship with a religious zeal. He is a poor farmer and father, and sends Roderick to work for the laird despite the teacher recommending further education. Roderick is dismissed as unsuitable and so is unable to help with the family's finances. Motivation for the murder is provided when the constable harasses the family and finally deprives them of their land. Roderick's lawyer is moved by the statement and hoping for a verdict of insanity engages a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist's report illustrates the nature of psychiatry at that time more than the character of Roderick. Doctor Thompson is supposedly an expert in the criminal mind. He has no interest in Roderick himself and little in justice but rather is concerned with proving his own theories about the criminal physiognomy and the criminal class. He is unimpressed by Roddy's writing though to the reader it seems thoughtful and humble. Doctor Thompson travels to Roddy's village and reinforces his theories by categorizing the villagers as stereotypes of the lowest class. Finally, the newspaper accounts relay the trial and its unsurprising conclusion.
The book is convincing and is a disturbing look at poverty and victimisation. It also, with its use of multiple voices and viewpoints, powerfully illustrates the impossibility of truly understanding the minds of others. It is recommended for capable senior readers.
Jenny Hamilton

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