Louise McReynold's latest work reinforces her position as an important voice in scholarship on late imperial Russian culture and society.... Murder Most Russian makes a valuable contribution to our understanding of the development of the Russian legal system, the intersection of crime and culture, and the transition to modernity in late imperial Russia.- Sharon A. Kowalsky (Slavic Review) McReynolds should be commended for the ways in which she integrates high political history with developments on the ground and uses cultural and social analysis to enrich her study of legal institutions. Artfully interweaving literaturese from several disciplines and historiography from different national contexts, Murder Most Russian lucidly tracks Russia's path toward its own unique form of modernity.- Faith Hillis (Journal of Modern History) Murder defined the Russian fin de siècle. From Dostoevsky's homicidal literary creations, through the 1881 assassination of Alexander II, to a host of killings impelled by greed and lust, the Empire seemed to be plotting its path to modernity in blood. Murder Most Russian is a superb study of the jury trials for homicide ushered in by the legal reforms of the 1860s.... Each trial yields a portrait of a fiercely contested public realm in which ideas about gender, morality, science, the state, and individual sovereignty were all up for grabs.... With this subtle and imaginative book, Louise McReynolds allows readers to peer not only inside the trials themselves but beyond them, into the wider courtroom of Russian public opinion.- Daniel Beer (Times Literary Supplement) This topic is not only luridly intriguing, but also gives great insight into the Russian cultural consciousness as the empire adapted itself to modern life. McReynolds's compelling book offers a homage to lively detective fiction and gruesome true-crime writing, while also providing an engaging history of crime's role in shaping Russian ways of seeing the world in the late imperial period.- Eugenia Kapsomera Amditis (Slavic and East European Journal)