I finally finished the Edwards book, "Naming Jack the Ripper". I ordered a used paperback and it came to me from England, that explaining why it took so long. However, once I had the book in my hands, it was difficult to put it down. Of all the recent Ripper books I have read, it was the most interesting. [I don't recall the ones I read long ago or who wrote them].
This forum led me not to expect much, but "Naming Jack the Ripper" was very well-written and the author seems a rather humble but enthusiastic person, not at all self-aggrandizing. I saw no sign whatsoever of anybody trying to pull the wool over the reader's eyes and I fail to see why anybody here could allege "fraud". The scientific process was well-explained and, of course, I enjoyed that. I only wish there could have been a bit more about the mtDNA of the descendant of Catherine Eddowes. I was hoping for her mt-haplogroup, but it was not mentioned, unless I missed something. I can't agree with the conclusion on the final page, but I must say I am leaning toward Kosminski as a viable suspect more than before I read this book. And it's not on account of the DNA, although I agree that the chance of DNA matching to both a descendant of Eddowes and one of Kosminski on the same item is "astronomically small". I am starting to believe that someone really did recognize Kosminski but would not give evidence against him.
But that doesn't mean I still don't have problems with Aaron Kosminski as the killer. Edwards wrote something like "It was as if the Ripper was a ghost" and that pretty much articulated my own thoughts for a long time. It's like he really did emerge from hell and then disappeared back into it without further ado. Or was a devilishly clever man--and I can't quite see Kosminski as being that calm and cool. Regardless, I found the explanation of how Sgt. Amos Simpson was able to get the shawl quite convincingly put. Experts looked at the item and didn't dispute that it was a shawl, BTW.
This forum led me not to expect much, but "Naming Jack the Ripper" was very well-written and the author seems a rather humble but enthusiastic person, not at all self-aggrandizing. I saw no sign whatsoever of anybody trying to pull the wool over the reader's eyes and I fail to see why anybody here could allege "fraud". The scientific process was well-explained and, of course, I enjoyed that. I only wish there could have been a bit more about the mtDNA of the descendant of Catherine Eddowes. I was hoping for her mt-haplogroup, but it was not mentioned, unless I missed something. I can't agree with the conclusion on the final page, but I must say I am leaning toward Kosminski as a viable suspect more than before I read this book. And it's not on account of the DNA, although I agree that the chance of DNA matching to both a descendant of Eddowes and one of Kosminski on the same item is "astronomically small". I am starting to believe that someone really did recognize Kosminski but would not give evidence against him.
But that doesn't mean I still don't have problems with Aaron Kosminski as the killer. Edwards wrote something like "It was as if the Ripper was a ghost" and that pretty much articulated my own thoughts for a long time. It's like he really did emerge from hell and then disappeared back into it without further ado. Or was a devilishly clever man--and I can't quite see Kosminski as being that calm and cool. Regardless, I found the explanation of how Sgt. Amos Simpson was able to get the shawl quite convincingly put. Experts looked at the item and didn't dispute that it was a shawl, BTW.
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