Houston Chronicle Sunday

Newbook returns to an irresistib­le theme

Murder at hallowed Harvard begets bigger story

- By Emily Eakin NEW YORK TIMES

Ayoung archaeolog­y graduate student at Harvard is bludgeoned to death by the professor with whom she’s having an affair. The murder weapon is a stone tool from the university’s Peabody Museum. Under cover of darkness, the professor steals into themuseum with the woman’s corpse and conducts a macabre funeral rite, draping her body in ancient jewelry and sprinkling it with red ocher powder.

Harvard, determined to avoid bad publicity, thwarts a police investigat­ion, protects the professor and silences the press. It’s as if themurder never happened.

This is the story Becky Cooper heard as a Harvard junior in 2009. It lodged in hermind and would not let go. Intuitivel­y, she knew the details couldn’t all be true, but the idea that her university was capable of covering up amurder did not strike her as far-fetched.

“The very things thatmade me love Harvard — its seductiven­ess, its limitlessn­ess — also made it a very convincing villain,” Cooper writes in “We Keep the Dead Close: A Murder at Harvard and a Half Century of Silence,” her book, 10 years in the making, about the case at the heart of the rumor. “Harvard felt omnipotent.”

At 512 pages, “We Keep the Dead Close” — which will be published by Grand Central on Tuesday trailing superlativ­es fromthe high-profile authors Ron Chernow, Stacy Schiff and Patrick Radden Keefe — is a true-crime procedural and a record of its author’s all-consuming obsession, unfolding in what can seem like real time. But it is also, more unusually, a young woman’s reckoning with an institutio­n whose mythic reputation belies unsavory secrets.

In this respect, “We Keep the Dead Close” is the latest entry in a rarefied genre: the Harvard murder. It’s a literary category in which erudition, integrity and high-mindedness are pitted against unthinkabl­e malevolenc­e. There have been just a handful of killings associated with the university since its founding in 1636 — an average of little more than one per century.

When one does occur, public reaction is intense. Foreign correspond­ents descend on Cambridge, Mass. Television cameras stake out Harvard Yard. And book deals ensue. The particular­s vary, but with each case the scandal, and perhaps the thrill, is that such a paragon of excellence can be brought so low.

It was the institutio­n itself “whose honor and virtue were really on trial,” historian Simon Schama writes in “Dead Certaintie­s” (1991), his imaginativ­e reconstruc­tion of the 1849murder of George Parkman, a Boston businessma­n, by John Webster, a former Harvard classmate and a professor at the medical school. Webster, who had fallen into debt and owed Parkman money, chopped his body into pieces, hiding his torso in a tea chest and throwing other parts down amedical-school privy, where they were eventually found — “bits of butcher’s trash sitting on the wet dirt.”

Sixty thousand people swarmed the Boston courthouse where Webster’s trial was held, including reporters from Germany and England. “What was it that had magnetized them all?” the sheriff in charge of managing the crowds wonders in Schama’s book. “The faintly disgusting excitement to be had from observing a man of the learned, moneyed classes revealed as a murdering beast?”

The sheriff was onto something. “Harvard seems like Harry Potter world,” said Melanie Thernstrom, the author of “Halfway Heaven: Diary of a Harvard Murder” (1997), about a Harvard junior who in 1995 stabbed her roommate 45 times and then hanged herself in their shower.

“It’s cloistered, it’s ivy covered, it has amystery that other schools don’t have,” Thernstrom added. “There is this sense of it being very much a secret society or a castle, where the drawbridge is up and the students inside are living this magical life. When one is murdered, it’s like evil has penetrated the fortress. How could someone have the supposed virtues that admit them to the kingdom and also commit such an evil act?”

Harvard’s role in the slaying at the center of “We Keep the Dead Close” also turns out to be more symbolic than literal. Cooper discovers that the lurid story about the young woman’s death at the hands of her professor had been circulatin­g on campus for years.

Over the course of her research, it became “a gateway into this much larger story about abuses of power of the institutio­n,” she said in a phone interview. “And it wasn’t at all where I expected to go.”

As her book opens, Cooper has graduated but is back on campus. She sits in on a class taught by the professor rumored to have committed the crime. By now, she has uncovered the dead woman’s name — Jane Britton — and pored over photograph­s of her from a dig in Iran. And she has combed through every press report about her killing, which remained unsolved.

It occurred early on Jan. 7, 1969, the day Britton was supposed to take her general exams in archaeolog­y. By the next day, it was front-page news, in some papers bumping reporting on Sirhan Sirhan’s upcoming trial for the assassinat­ion of Robert F. Kennedy.

Cooper listens, rapt, to the Harvard professor’s lectures, sifting them for clues. (When the professor, describing an ancient Israeli site in which people were buried under their houses, remarks, “the dead are kept close to you,” she jots down the line and circles it in her notebook — surely, it’s suspicious!) She painstakin­gly re-creates Britton’s life, tracking down her friends, her brother, her classmates, her boyfriend at the time and every still-living law enforcemen­t officer who investigat­ed her death.

She acquires Britton’s letters and journals. She files Freedom of Informatio­n Act requests with the CIA, FBI, Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, State Department and Defense Department, as well as records requests with the police in Boston and Cambridge and the district attorney’s offices in Middlesex and Sussex counties. She trawls Websleuths, a cold-case site. She even spends a month on a dig in Bulgaria, in emulation of her dead subject.

“We Keep the Dead Close” swells with false leads and red herrings — it’s notmuch of a spoiler to reveal that the supposedly murderous professor turns out to be innocent of the crime. And here is where Cooper’s book takes a novel, contempora­ry twist.

Potential suspects fall away, but the notion that Harvard is somehow complicit persists. As the #MeToo movement gathers momentum, friends of Cooper’s start to confide their own experience­s of inappropri­ate behavior by Harvard faculty. She untangles subplots involving allegation­s of harassment, sexism in tenure battles and other abuses of power, within the anthropolo­gy department and the university at large.

In the end, Cooper does learn who killed Britton, but the resolution is marred by the troubling new stories that emerge in its wake — stories that may one day fill another, very different kind of book.

“Because Harvard is older than the U.S. government, in some ways it’s an institutio­n that runs parallel to it,” Cooper said. “It becomes the vessel into which we can funnel all of our imaginatio­n about what this ivory tower castle is.”

Harvard may be no better or worse than other institutio­ns confrontin­g similar allegation­s of abuse that have long gone unaddresse­d, she said, but its public prominence gives it unusual visibility. As she put it, “Harvard is allowed to function as shorthand, and I don’t think that Harvard’s about to dispel that notion.”

 ?? Steven Senne / Associated Press ?? “We Keep the Dead Close” is a true-crime procedural about a killing at Harvard but also a reckoning with an institutio­n whose mythic reputation belies unsavory secrets.
Steven Senne / Associated Press “We Keep the Dead Close” is a true-crime procedural about a killing at Harvard but also a reckoning with an institutio­n whose mythic reputation belies unsavory secrets.
 ??  ?? ‘We Keep the Dead Close’ by Becky Cooper Grand Central Publishing 512 pages, $25.99
‘We Keep the Dead Close’ by Becky Cooper Grand Central Publishing 512 pages, $25.99

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