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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Characters  





3 Background  





4 Historical deviations  





5 Reception  





6 Film adaptation  





7 References  














The Great Train Robbery (novel)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Great Train Robbery
First edition cover
AuthorMichael Crichton
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel,
Crime novel
PublisherKnopf

Publication date

May 1975
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages266
ISBN0-394-49401-6
OCLC1175916

Dewey Decimal

813/.5/4
LC ClassPZ4.C9178 Gr PS3553.R48
Preceded byThe Terminal Man 
Followed byEaters of the Dead 

The Great Train Robbery is a best-selling 1975 historical novel written by Michael Crichton, his third novel under his own name and his thirteenth novel overall. Originally published in the US by Alfred A. Knopf (then a division of Random House), it was later published by Avon, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. The novel tells the story of the Great Gold Robbery of 1855, a massive gold heist that takes place on a train travelling through Victorian-era England on 22 May 1855. Most of the book takes place in London. A 1978 film adaptation was written and directed by Crichton.

Plot[edit]

In 1854, master thief Edward Pierce plans to steal a shipment of gold worth more than £12,000 being transported monthly from London to the Crimean War front. The bank has locked the gold in two custom-built safes, each with two locks, thus requiring a total of four keys to open. He recruits Robert Agar, a specialist in copying keys, as an accomplice.

Pierce's first target is the key held by bank president Edgar Trent. Through painstaking surveillance, conversations with bank employees and a deliberately bungled pickpocketing attempt, Pierce deduces that Trent's key is kept at his mansion. With the assistance of his longtime mistress, an actress known only as "Miss Miriam", and his loyal associate, a buck cabby named Barlow, Pierce and Agar successfully break into Trent's home and wine cellar by night and make a wax impression of the key.

Bank manager Henry Fowler contracts syphilis and asks his friend Pierce to aid him in seeking a remedy: sleeping with a virgin. After supposedly making the necessary arrangements through a madam (actually "Miss Miriam") and charging Fowler the exorbitant price of one hundred fifty guineas, Pierce and Agar make an impression of Fowler's key, which he always carries with him around his neck but takes off and leaves with his clothes during the assignation.

The other two keys are kept in a shipping department office at London Bridge Station. Pierce helps burglar "Clean Willy" Williams escape from Newgate Prison and the criminals succeed in making wax copies of the two keys at the railway station, completing the job with only seconds to spare before detection. Now possessing copies of all four keys, Pierce bribes Burgess, the poorly paid train guard who rides in the baggage van containing the safes. Agar is then able to perform a dry run of the theft on 17 February 1855, making sure that the copied keys work perfectly.

The actual robbery is scheduled for May 22nd, but Pierce's plans are again disrupted when "Clean Willy" suddenly turns police informant. Pierce's cabby Barlow murders Willy before he can reveal the most crucial information, although Willy has told enough to cause Edward Harranby, a very senior Scotland Yard detective, to deduce that a major robbery is planned. Through careful manipulation of another informant, Pierce diverts the police's attention to an alleged robbery of the transatlantic cable company's payroll in Greenwich, leaving the thieves free and clear to finally strike.

By the next day, much of England is in an uproar upon the discovery of the robbery, with every organisation involved in the gold shipment blaming each other, few leads as to the true culprits and no idea how it was done. The members of the gang drop out of sight.

Eighteen months later, Agar's mistress, who has been caught in the act of robbing a drunk, informs on Agar to escape imprisonment. Agar, who has been arrested on an unrelated charge, turns informant after being threatened by Harranby with transportation to Australia. Pierce and Burgess are arrested at a prize-fighting event in Manchester, and all three are ultimately convicted. Pierce is sentenced to a long prison term, but escapes while being transported from court and disappears, along with the money from the Great Train Robbery.

Characters[edit]

Background[edit]

Crichton became aware of the story when lecturing at Cambridge University. He later read the transcripts of the court trial and started researching the historical period.[1]

Historical deviations[edit]

The story is a fictionalised representation of the historical events, although the setting can be considered quite accurate. The characters' names are changed in the novel; for example, the main protagonist William Pierce is changed to Edward Pierce and Edward Agar to Robert Agar. Crichton stated that for storytelling purposes, he did not want to be constrained by what actually happened.[1]

An accurate, non-fiction narrative of the robbery can be found in David C. Hanrahan's book The First Great Train Robbery.[2]

Reception[edit]

The New York Times called it "Mr Crichton's best thriller to date."[3] The Los Angeles Times described it as "marvellous fun."[4]

The book was one of the biggest best selling novels in the US in 1975.[5]

Three audiobook versions have been released:

Film adaptation[edit]

The novel was later made into a 1978 film entitled The First Great Train Robbery directed by Crichton starring Sean Connery as Pierce, Donald Sutherland as Agar and Lesley-Anne Down as Miriam. Unlike the real incident, only Pierce is captured and tried and all of the protagonists are seen to escape to freedom after the trial. The film was nominated for Best Cinematography Award for the British Society of Cinematographers, and the film was also nominated for Best Motion Picture by the Edgar Allan Poe award by the Mystery Writers Association of America. The film score by Jerry Goldsmith was short, but a favourite in the composer's repertoire and an extended version of the music was released in 2004.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Owen, Michael (January 28, 1979). "Director Michael Crichton Films a Favorite Novelist". New York Times. p. D17.
  • ^ Hanrahan, David C. (2011). The First Great Train Robbery. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 9780709090403.
  • ^ Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher (June 10, 1975). "Books of The Times: A Flash Pull for a Fat Pogue". New York Times. p. 36.
  • ^ Yardley, Jonathan (June 15, 1975). "Crighton Arrives on 'Great Train Robbery'". Los Angeles Times.
  • ^ "The Best Sellers of 1975". New York Times. December 7, 1975.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Great_Train_Robbery_(novel)&oldid=1232021577"

    Categories: 
    1975 American novels
    American crime novels
    American novels adapted into films
    Novels by Michael Crichton
    Alfred A. Knopf books
    Fiction set in 1855
    Novels set in London
    Novels set on trains
    Novels about theft
    Fiction about train robbery
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
     



    This page was last edited on 1 July 2024, at 14:28 (UTC).

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