No...
No, I don't regret writing The Lodger, it had to be done. If I hadn't someone else would have done and it was I who 'discovered' Tumblety. Until 1995, when the book was published, his name was unknown in Ripper circles.
However, that said there were great obstacles to overcome. First we were on a publishing deadline of only ten months as I had foolishly said too much in a TV documentary that I participated in in 1994. From the clues I had given the TV people (based in New York) were able to identify Tumblety and were going to include him in the documentary meaning we had to get the book out either first or contemporaneously with the release of the documentary in 1995. There were no digital newspaper sources to search back in 1995 and we had to rely on Keith Skinner, visits to Colindale and Paul Gainey's research trip to the USA. Even then were able to locate only a fraction of the available material on Tumblety. Also, at this time, the dreaded 'diary' was emerging on an unsuspecting 'Ripperworld'.
The plus side was that we received a five-figure sum (each) as an advance from the publishers, we were working on a genuine 1888 suspect and had unpublished primary source material on the suspect (the Littlechild letter).
Our book was published just in time and contained much new material on the case as well as the 'new' suspect. I am not sure of the exact figure but around 47,000 copies of the book have sold. Of course I would have preferred not to have written a book that was presenting the case for a single suspect. But that was how it was.
Originally posted by Tom_Wescott
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However, that said there were great obstacles to overcome. First we were on a publishing deadline of only ten months as I had foolishly said too much in a TV documentary that I participated in in 1994. From the clues I had given the TV people (based in New York) were able to identify Tumblety and were going to include him in the documentary meaning we had to get the book out either first or contemporaneously with the release of the documentary in 1995. There were no digital newspaper sources to search back in 1995 and we had to rely on Keith Skinner, visits to Colindale and Paul Gainey's research trip to the USA. Even then were able to locate only a fraction of the available material on Tumblety. Also, at this time, the dreaded 'diary' was emerging on an unsuspecting 'Ripperworld'.
The plus side was that we received a five-figure sum (each) as an advance from the publishers, we were working on a genuine 1888 suspect and had unpublished primary source material on the suspect (the Littlechild letter).
Our book was published just in time and contained much new material on the case as well as the 'new' suspect. I am not sure of the exact figure but around 47,000 copies of the book have sold. Of course I would have preferred not to have written a book that was presenting the case for a single suspect. But that was how it was.
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