When Patrick Radden Keefe was living in London while shooting the TV adaptation of his book âSay Nothing,â he heard about a teen-ager who fell from a luxurious apartment tower in mysterious circumstances. As he looked into it, he learned that the boy, Zac Brettler, had assumed an alternate identity as the son of a Russian oligarch, and had connected with dangerous peopleâjust as mysterious. His story in The New Yorker, âA Teenâs Fatal Plunge into the London Underworld,â became the basis of his new book âLondon Falling.â âItâs not crime, per se, that interests me,â Radden Keefe tells David Remnick, âbut the intermingling of the licit and illicit worlds, and the ways in which people deviate from a kind of conventional morality by degreesâand then the stories that they tell themselves about doing that.â He shares recordings from Brettlerâs parents of conversations that they had as they sought to uncover what had happened to their son.
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Further reading:Â
âLondon Falling,â by Patrick Radden Keefe
âA Teenâs Fatal Plunge Into the London Underworld,â by Patrick Radden Keefe
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