An historical true crime accounting of London's notorious serial
murderers and their victims, spanning the Victorian era to the
mid-twentieth century. Murders and murderers fascinate us—and
perhaps serial killers fascinate us most of all. In the twentieth
century the term came to be used to describe murders committed by the
same person, often with similar methods. But, as Jonathan Oates
demonstrates in this selection of cases from London, this category of
crime has existed for centuries, though it may have become more common
in modern times. Using police and pathologists' reports, Home Office
and prison files, trial transcripts and lurid accounts in contemporary
newspapers, he reconstructs these cases in order to explain how they
took place, who the killers were, what motivated them, and how for a
while they got away with their crimes. He does not neglect the victims
and provides a revealing analysis of the killers, their circumstances
and their actions. Among the nineteenth-century cases are the infamous
killings of Jack the Ripper and the less-well-known but terrifying
crimes of the only female killer, the Deptford Poisoner.
Twentieth-century cases covered in forensic detail include the
Black-out Ripper of 1942, the Thames Nude Murders of the 1960s and the
multiple killings of Joseph Smith, John Christie and John George
Haigh. There is also one especially troubling unsolved case—the
notorious Soho prostitute killings of the 1930s and 1940s, which may
be the work of one man. Jonathan Oates's gripping accounts of this
wide range of serial killings gives us a powerful insight into the
nature of these crimes, the characters of the killers and the police
methods of the period.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399003728
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter