British Murder: A Compendium 1901-2000 by William Wright
British Murder: A Compendium 1901-2000 by William Wright
34 in stock
Author(s): William Wright
Pub: Amberley
Pack Qty: 0 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9781445687247 - New
234mm x 158mm x 22mm
Publication: 15 January 2019Pages: 304
George Orwell wrote a famous essay, 'Decline Of The English Murder,' which appeared in the Socialist weekly Tribune on February 15, 1946. He lamented the passing of the classic murderers such as Seddon, Crippen, and Smith and considered modern murder as banal, meaningless. He was wrong. No murder is meaningless. Every crime reveals something about the culprit and the victim, as this book proves. Any real study of Neville Heath, John Haigh, or John Christie'three of the most notorious psychopaths of the post-war years'reveals fascinating and, in Heath`s case especially, tragic stories. And the progress of forensics in the second half of the 20th century is a remarkable tale in itself. It becomes harder and harder to get away with murder'and yet people still think they can outwit the law; some do. The last entry is in some ways the worst; the deeds of Dr Harold Shipman, a bearded egotist who would have been a great companion for Drs Palmer, Pritchard, and Lamson in the 19th century, who proves that the children of Cain are still with us.
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