Originally posted by Stewart P. Evans
While I can understand Menges confusion at your seemingly contradictory statements, I do not understand his attacks upon your book. Is it outdated in the face of the mountains of information that have come forth in the last 16 years? Of course it is, but it's also the sole reason why people went looking and FOUND this mountain of information. I have always said The Lodger is a template for what a suspect book SHOULD be, and naturally that includes speculating and theorising. Without those two things, you merely have a boring collection of facts and newspaper clippings. It's one of only two suspect books of at least the last 20 years that I would call necessary, the other being Rob House's book, because a thorough, thoughtful, and detailed book on Kosminski was LONG overdue, and I can't imagine anyone having done a better job with it than Rob did, even if some feel his enthusiasm went overboard at times. It certainly did in The Lodger as well, but an author's enthusiasm is a big chunk of what makes a book readable. Contrary to the bias and poor powers of observation that have recently become my trademark on message boards, I think people will be very pleasantly surprised by the tone of my book and the new information contained when it is finally published (and it will be). It will be the third 'necesarry' suspect book, unless Hainsworth beats me to print with the new authoritative book on Druitt!
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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