Become a Member
Books

Murder most Freudian

We meet psychologist-turned-thriller-writer Frank Tallis, whose Austrian Jewish hero is to be seen on TV

December 30, 2008 15:35
Frank Tallis: research into Sigmund Freud’s world so detailed that it reveals “the type of ashtray on the table”

By

Jenni Frazer,

Jenni Frazer

2 min read

I think of my books as Trojan horses,” says Frank Tallis. “They are detective novels, and they are meant to be entertainment — but I like to drop some nuggets in which ought to leave the reader feeling enriched.”

Indeed, so enriching are Tallis’s books that reading them is almost like taking a university refresher course — on turn-of-the-20th-century Vienna. The four titles he has so far produced, forming the crime series, The Liebermann Papers, relate the adventures of Max Liebermann, a young Jewish psychologist, and his pastry-loving detective friend.

Of Liebermann’s encounters with the father of modern psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, Tallis cheerfully boasts that he has researched “down to the type of ashtray there would have been on the table”. The books provide a window on the worlds of psychiatry, music, and bizarre, closed-door societies which were almost certainly the seedbeds for Nazi ideology. Fascinatingly, given Tallis’s Italian Catholic background, they depict an era and a place in which, for a brief generation, Jewish culture flourished side by side with vicious antisemitism.

Tallis, on the verge of retiring from his successful practice as a clinical psychologist in order to devote himself to writing, says it was “hugely important” for Liebermann to be Jewish. “We enter this world through Freud, who in effect was the father of my profession. Jewish identity was very closely related to early psychology… Freud worried that it was almost too closely associated.”

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.