Matthew Chapman est un avocat londonien dont le travail se concentre sur les réclamations relatives aux lésions corporelles et au droit international privé. Son expertise se manifeste dans ses analyses de questions juridiques complexes, où il explore la nature des réclamations frauduleuses et les aspects pratiques des litiges. L'approche de Chapman se caractérise par un examen minutieux des principes juridiques et de leur application concrète.
The Snail and the Ginger Beer tells the full story of the remarkable case of
Donoghue v Stevenson which represents, perhaps, the greatest contribution made
by English and Scottish lawyers to the development of the common law. It
provides vivid biographical sketches of the protagonists and of the great
lawyers who were involved in the case.
Matthew Chapman, Darwin's great-great-grandson, leaves his Hollywood screenwriting career to explore the evolution debate in Dayton, Tennessee, site of the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial. He aims to assess whether views on evolution have shifted over the past seventy-five years. As a defiant atheist, Chapman grapples with enduring fundamentalist beliefs that reject evolution, while also confronting his own spiritual struggles. This journey evolves into an inward quest, transforming into a tragicomic "accidental memoir." He reflects on his lineage, starting with Charles Darwin and tracing through his great-grandfather Sir Francis Darwin, a botanist, and his grandmother Frances, a poet who battled depression. His mother, Clare, faced her own challenges, including alcoholism. Chapman’s narrative blends travel writing and reportage, capturing his experiences in the South alongside a history of his family and his mid-life doubts. The result is a genre-defying work that is darkly humorous, provocative, and poignant, offering insight into both the evolution debate and personal introspection.