The Old Man and the Gun: And Other Tales of True Crime by Grann David
Author:Grann, David [Grann, David]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Crime, History, Biography, Mystery
ISBN: 9780525566038
Amazon: 0525566031
Goodreads: 40641084
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 2018-09-14T07:00:00+00:00
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âI have infected you,â Chris warns the reader at the beginning of âAmok.â âYou will not be able to get free of me.â Wroblewski remained haunted by one riddle in the novel, which, he believed, was crucial to solving the case. A character asks Chris, âWho was the one-eyed man among the blind?â The phrase derives from Erasmus (1469â1536), the Dutch theologian and classical scholar, who said, âIn the kingdom of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.â Who in âAmok,â Wroblewski wondered, was the one-eyed man? And who were the blind men? In the novelâs last line, Chris suddenly claims that he has solved the riddle, explaining, âThis was the one killed by blind jealousy.â But the sentence, with its strange lack of context, made little sense.
One hypothesis based on âAmokâ was that Bala had murdered Janiszewski after beginning a homosexual affair with him. In the novel, after Chrisâs closest friend confesses that he is gay, Chris says that part of him wanted to âstrangle him with a ropeâ and âchop a hole in a frozen river and dump him there.â Still, the theory seemed dubious. Wroblewski had thoroughly investigated Janiszewskiâs background and there was no indication that he was gay.
Another theory was that the murder was the culmination of Balaâs twisted philosophyâthat he was a postmodern version of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, the two brilliant Chicago students who, in the nineteen-twenties, were so entranced by Nietzscheâs ideas that they killed a fourteen-year-old boy to see if they could execute the perfect murder and become supermen. At their trial, in which they received life sentences, Clarence Darrow, the legendary defense attorney who represented them, said of Leopold, âHere is a boy at sixteen or seventeen becoming obsessed with these doctrines. It was not a casual bit of philosophy with him; it was his life.â Darrow, trying to save the boys from the death penalty, concluded, âIs there any blame attached because somebody took Nietzscheâs philosophy seriously and fashioned his life upon it?â¦It is hardly fair to hang a nineteen-year-old boy for the philosophy that was taught him at the university.â
In âAmok,â Chris clearly aspires to be a postmodern Ãbermensch, speaking of his âwill to powerâ and insisting that anyone who is âunable to kill should not stay alive.â Yet these sentiments did not fully explain the murder of the unknown man in the novel, who, Chris says, had âbehaved inappropriatelyâ toward him. Chris, alluding to what happened between them, says teasingly, âMaybe he didnât do anything significant, but the most vicious Devil is in the details.â If Balaâs philosophy had justified, in his mind, a break from moral constraints, including the prohibition on murder, these passages suggested that there was still another motive, a deep personal connection to the victimâsomething that the brutality of the crime also indicated. With Bala unable to leave Poland, Wroblewski and his team began to question the suspectâs closest friends and family.
Many of those interrogated saw Bala positivelyââa bright, interesting man,â one of his former girlfriends said of him.
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