Sarah Wise
The Emperor of Vice
The Fox and the Flies: The World of Joseph Silver, Racketeer and Psychopath
By Charles van Onselen
Jonathan Cape 646pp £20
In 1978, the author of this book, an academic based in South Africa, first glimpsed the name Joseph Lis in a late-Victorian newspaper cutting. Lis (meaning ‘fox’), who later adopted the surname Silver, was a Polish-born pimp and sex-trafficker extraordinaire – a violent, syphilitic super-criminal, who during his thirty-year career had the police forces and attorneys of several cities in his pocket. Charles van Onselen has spent almost three decades hunting the Fox through the archives of four continents, and the result of his researches is a book that is profoundly unsettling, containing virtually no acts of kindness or decency. It catalogues crimes of relentless brutality and lifts many stones to reveal a subculture so squalid that reading The Fox and the Flies, you feel you want to take your brain out and scrub it.
‘White-slave trading’ was the melodramatic and inaccurate fin-de-siècle name for the trafficking of poor and/or vulnerable women to brothels in Continental Europe, the Americas, southern Africa and across Asia. To its perpetrators, women ranked only just above the animals – a non-hardy form of livestock to be traded, controlled, abandoned
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Under its longest-serving editor, Graydon Carter, Vanity Fair was that rare thing – a New York society magazine that published serious journalism.
@PeterPeteryork looks at what Carter got right.
Peter York - Deluxe Editions
Peter York: Deluxe Editions - When the Going Was Good: An Editor’s Adventures During the Last Golden Age of Magazines by Graydon Carter
literaryreview.co.uk
Henry James returned to America in 1904 with three objectives: to see his brother William, to deliver a series of lectures on Balzac, and to gather material for a pair of books about modern America.
Peter Rose follows James out west.
Peter Rose - The Restless Analyst
Peter Rose: The Restless Analyst - Henry James Comes Home: Rediscovering America in the Gilded Age by Peter Brooks...
literaryreview.co.uk
Vladimir Putin served his apprenticeship in the KGB toward the end of the Cold War, a period during which Western societies were infiltrated by so-called 'illegals'.
Piers Brendon examines how the culture of Soviet spycraft shaped his thinking.
Piers Brendon - Tinker, Tailor, Sleeper, Troll
Piers Brendon: Tinker, Tailor, Sleeper, Troll - The Illegals: Russia’s Most Audacious Spies and the Plot to Infiltrate the West by Shaun Walker
literaryreview.co.uk