Writing for the Village Voice, Jim Ruland (who returns here tomorrow with a guest review of the new Joe Meno) looks at a pair of Freud-related titles.
When you think about Sigmund Freud, do you think of cigars? Cocaine? Coney Island? The Viennese psychoanalyst arrived in New York in 1909 to deliver a series of lectures at Clark University in Massachusetts, but surprisingly little is known about his stay in the city except that he went to Coney Island. Freud's only visit to America is the jumping off point for a pair of fictional investigations into what makes us tick and, in the case of Jed Rubenfeld's historical thriller The Interpretation of Murder, stop ticking.
Ha! The original title was something along those lines.
Posted by: Jim Ruland | October 03, 2006 at 12:10 PM