The genuine tryal of Dr. Nosmoth, a physician in Pekin : For the murder of the…
This book is famous for being one of the first courtroom thrillers. And it really delivers—long before homicide detectives and TV dramas, here’s a story so crazy that people named it after its villain. Let me set the scene.
The Story
We start with Dr. Nosmoth, a hotshot physician from Pekin (that’s Peking—modern Beijing). He comes back to London wealthy, with a wife from “that country.” But then she ends up dead. Poison. The whole trial kicks off, and we get a word-for-word account of witnesses, lawyers, and the judge’s questions. Dr. Nosmoth? He swears he loved her. But there are tainted drinks, a secret maid, and dozens of clues that make him look more and more suspicious. Oh, and the prison keeper says a ghost-like figure visits him at night. So yeah, it’s quite the messy investigation.
Why You Should Read It
Sure, the words are old-timey, but the drama is off the charts. I loved it because it feels like being a fly on the wall in 1751. You see how they argued cases three hundred years ago—eyewitnesses were often unreliable, and medical evidence was nowhere near like today. But the characters are as real as any on true crime TV. Dr. Nosmoth feels smug one minute, pathetic the next. You start asking yourself: would I trust a guy who blames a ghost? The whole thing pushes you to decide—is he an innocent man railroaded by gossip, or a cool-headed killer? There’s a section where a chemist explains how poison works before breakfast—it’s wild.
Final Verdict
If you love old newspapers, podcasts about unsolved mysteries, or Name of the Rose without all the monk stuff, grab this. Also great for fans of historical real-crime, like the books by Dr. Harold Schechter. But be warned: the ending is NOT what you might guess going in. No easy closure. It’ll stay with you for days. Worth every dusty page.
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