Picture of author.

Seymour Shubin (1921–2014)

Author of Witness to myself

20+ Works 265 Members 9 Reviews

Works by Seymour Shubin

Witness to myself (2006) 154 copies, 5 reviews
The Captain (1982) 18 copies, 3 reviews
Holy Secrets (1984) 16 copies, 1 review
The Good And The Dead (2000) 16 copies
Anyone's My Name (1998) 10 copies
Voices (1985) 9 copies
Never Quite Dead (1988) 9 copies
The Man From Yesterday (2005) 8 copies
Wellville, U.S.A. (1961) 5 copies
A Matter of Fear (2002) 3 copies
Tell Me You Love Me (1993) 3 copies
The Hunch (2009) 2 copies
Lonely No More (2012) 2 copies
Fury's Children (1997) 2 copies

Associated Works

Loners (2008) — Introduction — 4 copies
The Savage Kick: Issue 5 (2010) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1921
Date of death
2014
Gender
male
Short biography
Seymour Shubin is the author of fifteen novels and more articles and short stories than he can begin to remember. His novels and stories have won numerous awards. 'The Captain', received the Edgar Allan Poe Special Award from Mystery Writers of America, and was also the subject of an essay in 100 Great Detectives. Another of his novels, 'Anyone's My Name', a New York Times' bestseller, and has been used as a text in university criminology courses.

His short stories have appeared in a wide range of publications, ranging from such popular magazines as Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine to the literary Story and Potpourri, where one of his stories won the best-of-year award. A collection of sixteen of Shubin's tales were collected in 'Lonely No More', which was released in 2012. Other stories have been anthologized, and one of Shubin's stories -- 'The Cry of a Violin' -- was broadcast twice on the BBC, whilst 'The Good and The Dead' was collected onto six CDs by Books in Motion. His one nonfiction book was a commissioned biography of John B. Amos, the late founder of the insurance giant, AFLAC.

Shubin was born and raised in Philadelphia, PA and is a graduate of Temple University. He and his wife, Gloria, live in one of the suburbs. They have two married children. His son, Neil Shubin, wrote the paleontology book 'Your Inner Fish'... which was shortlisted for the Royal Society Prize for Science Books in 2009.
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Map Location
USA

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
One quarter of the way through and I am hooked! It is a real page turner!

Overwhelming guilt. Fifteen years. A return to the scene of the crime. And the truth. The agony that the main character goes through is tragic, though totally self-inflicted. I very much felt a "Tell Tale Heart" vibe throughout the read.

“Kill yourself or give yourself up!”
Unlike other Hard Case Crime offerings, Witness to Myself is not about a mobster or hitman or hi-tech executive turned drug-dealer. It is an unusual story in that respect and lacks some of the over-the-top action found in many other Hard Case Crime books. It, however, is not a disappointment by any means. It is a brilliant piece of work told from two points of view, that of Alan, the young cousin, and Alan's cousin, who later became a crime reporter. At the beginning, it is a little show more confusing with the switching between the two points of view, but any such confusion settles down later.

On the surface, Alan is a good, decent kid who spends vacations with his parents and does not get into much trouble. Alan eventually grows up and becomes a well-respected lawyer and is appointed to head a much-renowned charitable organization. But, Alan is troubled. He is troubled because he has a deep, dark secret that he has been trying to suppress for many years going back to age fifteen, when on a family vacation to Cape Code in the family motorhome, he went on a run barefoot through the woods by himself. In the woods, he came upon a young girl, perhaps twelve, and helped her get her kite down. Then, following some impulse that he chose not to control, Alan touches the girl inappropriately and strangles her. His family leaves the place where they pulled out to meander on the beach and Alan is haunted by what he did. His entire life is consumed by the guilt of what he did although he never heard anything about on the news so he is not entirely sure if he actually killed the girl. Alan is consumed with his guilt and, when his father pulls him aside to talk about the dangers of drugs, Alan is afraid because he thinks his secret has been discovered.

Years later, Alan meets a young nurse while in the hospital and, despite her suspicions and those of her father, that he might just be another creep out to use her and throw her away, they have a burgeoning romance. Yet, Alan is still consumed with what he did years ago and he has to know what really happened. Of course, this means returning to the scene of the crime and asking questions that might only end up exposing him - - that is, if he actually did what he thinks he did.

The story was fascinating because it goes into the mind of Alan, who the reader knows is a creep, but no one else in his life knows that about him. The story is about what he did tears him apart and leaves the reader with questions about the nature of evil. The story is also about whether he can ever be redeemed and whether that one horrible moment in Cape Cod is what really defines him. Or is Alan as seemingly innocent (except for that one vicious, heinous moment) as he makes himself out to be? Is this book a confession by one consumed with guilt for his horrible crime or is the book rather an
attempt by an evil conniving pedophile to whitewash what he has done and plea on the jury's (or the reader's) sympathies and argue mitigating circumstances and remorse. How do we (the readers) really know if this is truly the only time Alan acted out or how many other things he got away with while pretending to be a fine upstanding citizen? Is the entire book a phony ploy for sympathy? In this respect, perhaps Alan is scarier and more manipulative of the reader than Lou Ford in the Killer Inside Me ever was. At least Lou Ford knew there was a sickness inside of him. Alan never seems to be willing to admit it.

All in all, a wonderful character study of a criminal who perhaps wants the reader to think of him not as so much of a criminal
show less
The protagonist of the story, Alan Benning is a successful lawyer working with a major charity in Pennsylvania. He is young, healthy, has a great job and has just met a beautiful woman who loves him dearly. Everything looks to be going perfectly for him, but inside he's haunted by something that happened in a Cape Cod woods some fifteen years previously when he was on a family holiday. He finds that he needs to return to the scene of the crime to find out what really happened on that day in show more order to put to rest the guilt that has been hounding him and to give him the peace he needs to continue the rest of his life. Seymour Shubin’s approach is complex and clever, with the story narrated by Alan's cousin and childhood pal, Colin who is a true crime writer – the implication being that "Witness To Murder" is the true crime book that Colin has written about Alan's life. That Colin fills in elements of the story that he couldn't have been privy to and ascribes emotions and dialogue to Alan that he couldn't have been aware of leads to questions about the veracity of the story. Was this the "true story" of what actually happened? Was the narrator reliable? This makes the overall book a hugely interesting piece of cleverly constructed meta-fiction. The book is also a story about redemption and forgiveness. Is it possible to forgive even the most heinous of crimes? Shubin looks at this question from almost every possible angle, lays out the issues in human terms, but refuses to give an answer leaving it to each reader to arrive at their own conclusions. Despite the cleverness of the narrative "Witness To Myself" also works as a great work of mystery fiction and we journey alongside Alan, slowly reconstructing what happened in the woods fifteen years ago, Shubin builds the story cleverly with the tension ratcheting up incrementally over each successive chapter. The book moves forward with great focus and is a fast and intensely paced read – an absolute page-turner. Shubin's writing is believable and gripping making for a superb mystery novel; its philosophical plot allied to the intensity of the writing will ensure that “Witness To Myself" will linger long in the memory. show less
Now this is more like it... if you enjoy the 70's style of crime thrillers like Death Wish, then you'll love this.

The Captain is a retired chief of police, forced into a nursing home by his children following the death of his wife. Surrounded by senile inmates and unsympathetic staff he decides to strike a blow for the elderley in the only way he knows how... killing the offenders.

I loved this book and have been trying to get hold of it since a recommendation was made on here by a fellow show more member. The only reason I downgraded to 4 stars is that at times the plot got confusing with new characters being introduced.

A nice take on how we treat the aged with a strong moral theme running throughout. A few great twists and an awesome ending.

Give it a try!
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
20
Also by
2
Members
265
Popularity
#86,990
Rating
3.2
Reviews
9
ISBNs
40
Languages
3

Charts & Graphs