The Secret History, murder mystery novel by Donna Tartt, published in 1992.
Tartt’s first novel, begun when she was still an undergraduate student at Bennington College and bought for a reported $450,000 by Knopf after a bidding war, quickly became a bestseller and made its author a reluctant star. The critics were not impressed: they thought the book leaden, pretentious, and thinly characterized, part of a market fad of novels featuring badly behaved young adults in the vein of Bret Easton Ellis’s Less Than Zero and Jay McInerney’s Bright Lights, Big City. In some ways, they were taking it too seriously; in others, perhaps, not seriously enough.
The Secret History is a page-turner structured as a classic mystery tale, but there is more to the novel than plot alone. Telling his story as if it were still unfolding, though in fact he is recalling events long since past, the narrator, Richard Papen, leaves behind his unsatisfying teenage years in California to enroll at Hampden, a small, exclusive college in Vermont. He is soon captivated by a group of five rich, otherworldly classics students and their mercurial tutor, Julian Morrow, and gradually becomes enmeshed in the clique. He learns that the group—Henry, Francis, Bunny, and the twins Charles and Camilla—have been attempting to re-create a frenzied bacchanal to honor Dionysus, the consequences of which culminate in Bunny’s death. The remainder of the novel charts the slow splintering of the group’s friendships under the pressures of fear, remorse, and sickened self-knowledge.
Mississippi-born Tartt, herself a classics student, originally titled her novel The God of Illusion, but changed it to The Secret History to allude to the Byzantine writer Procopius’s tell-all account of the court of the emperor Justinian. It is a study of ruin, of lives blighted forever by adolescent hubris and antinomian ideas taken too far. It is also about charisma: the reader is seduced, along with Richard, by the charming and dissolute Francis; by Julian’s sublime sensibility and the twins’ ethereal self-containment; and, above all, by Henry, who is by turns benevolent and warm, aloof and forbidding, but always, in the end, opaque. The storytelling of Tartt’s melancholy murder mystery retains its grip to the final page and beyond, and her mix of violence and sophistication evokes other Southern writers such as Flannery O’Connor and Eudora Welty.
As of 2022, the 30th anniversary of its publication, more than 2.3 million copies of the novel had sold in the English language, and it had been translated into some 40 languages. A film version of The Secret History was planned, with a screenplay by Joan Didion and her husband and partner John Gregory Dunne, but after producer Alan Pakula died in an automobile accident the project was abandoned.