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NOT A GENTLEMAN'S WORK by Gerard Koeppel

NOT A GENTLEMAN'S WORK

The Untold Story of a Gruesome Murder at Sea and the Long Road to Truth

by Gerard Koeppel

Pub Date: June 16th, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-306-90338-0
Publisher: Hachette

The story of one of the most vicious murders ever committed at sea.

On July 8, 1896, the Herbert Fuller, loaded with lumber intended for Buenos Aires, departed Boston with 12 people aboard: the captain, his wife, nine crew members, and one passenger. Less than a week into the journey, in the middle of the night, someone viciously butchered the captain, his wife, and the second mate, slamming each one’s head multiple times with the ship’s ax. But no one heard anything, and only three men could possibly have done it: Thomas Bram, the first mate who had argued with the second mate; Justus Westerberg, also called Charley Brown, an odd Swedish sailor with a murder conviction in his past; and Lester Monks, a young alcoholic Harvard dropout whose parents had paid his fare to get rid of him for a while. Since nobody aboard had a known motive, whodunit? And why? Former CBS News editor Koeppel covers the murder itself in two pages and then tries to follow the crew’s harrowing journey back to port, although there is no definitive narrative of what happened on that trip. Bram was convicted of murder even though strong evidence indicates he was innocent, and President Woodrow Wilson eventually pardoned him. In the rest of the narrative, the author details the lives of Bram and Monks. This should be the stuff of a gripping, can’t-put-it-down thriller, but the book is disappointing. Although Koeppel clearly conducted an impressive amount of research, there just isn’t enough information available to justify a book-length project, even one this slim. Consequently, the author fills the space with unimportant, unrelated details that do little to contribute to his story.

A stupendous long-form magazine piece masquerading as a book.