I see that latest bizarre theory put forward to explain Mike's acquisition of a Victorian diary in March 1992 is that he simply wanted "to find out how easy it would have been for some practical joker to get hold of an unused or partly used diary from the 1880s."
Not surprisingly, it's as nonsensical as all the other theories which have come from this quarter.
We are supposed to believe that Mike decided to carry out his own investigation into the availability of Victorian diaries after having spoken gushingly to Doreen about the diary of Jack the Ripper on 9th or 10th March 1992.
Well let's think about that on the basis that the diary came into his possession from an electrician - or he had simply seen it - on 9th March 1992.
If Mike was unsure that the diary was a genuine diary then he obviously didn't know that it was a diary from 1888/9. No tests to date the paper or the diary had been carried out at this stage. The bound volume with which he had been presented did not bear any printed date or any other indication of its age apart from what had been written in it (by the suspected prankster). Without knowing if this "diary" was really from the Victorian period, what would have been the point of an investigation into the availability of Victorian diaries?
And if it was a fake "diary", recently forged, the volume in which it was written could have been one from 1895 or the early twentieth century or any other time. So an investigation into the availability of diaries from 1880-1890 was absolutely pointless.
Assuming that Mike hadn't worked out that the "diary" was a photo album or scrapbook, surely his investigation would have been into the availability of (undated but old looking) diaries bound in black cloth and leather of an approximate size of 11 by 8.5 inches, with a minimum of 63 blank pages, because THAT is would have been what he had been shown and THAT is the only investigation that would have made any sense.
Mind you, the entire theory is nonsensical for another reason because even Mike couldn't have thought that the ONLY way to obtain a Victorian diary was through a specialist second hand bookdealer.
But hey, perhaps we will soon be told that Mike's investigation didn't stop at finding out what was available from specialist second hand bookdealers. Perhaps he wanted to find out if Victorian diaries could be found at auction houses so popped over to Outhwaite and Litherland one Tuesday in March 1992 to see what they had to offer....
Not surprisingly, it's as nonsensical as all the other theories which have come from this quarter.
We are supposed to believe that Mike decided to carry out his own investigation into the availability of Victorian diaries after having spoken gushingly to Doreen about the diary of Jack the Ripper on 9th or 10th March 1992.
Well let's think about that on the basis that the diary came into his possession from an electrician - or he had simply seen it - on 9th March 1992.
If Mike was unsure that the diary was a genuine diary then he obviously didn't know that it was a diary from 1888/9. No tests to date the paper or the diary had been carried out at this stage. The bound volume with which he had been presented did not bear any printed date or any other indication of its age apart from what had been written in it (by the suspected prankster). Without knowing if this "diary" was really from the Victorian period, what would have been the point of an investigation into the availability of Victorian diaries?
And if it was a fake "diary", recently forged, the volume in which it was written could have been one from 1895 or the early twentieth century or any other time. So an investigation into the availability of diaries from 1880-1890 was absolutely pointless.
Assuming that Mike hadn't worked out that the "diary" was a photo album or scrapbook, surely his investigation would have been into the availability of (undated but old looking) diaries bound in black cloth and leather of an approximate size of 11 by 8.5 inches, with a minimum of 63 blank pages, because THAT is would have been what he had been shown and THAT is the only investigation that would have made any sense.
Mind you, the entire theory is nonsensical for another reason because even Mike couldn't have thought that the ONLY way to obtain a Victorian diary was through a specialist second hand bookdealer.
But hey, perhaps we will soon be told that Mike's investigation didn't stop at finding out what was available from specialist second hand bookdealers. Perhaps he wanted to find out if Victorian diaries could be found at auction houses so popped over to Outhwaite and Litherland one Tuesday in March 1992 to see what they had to offer....
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