Originally posted by rjpalmer
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Everything we know Anne helped Mike with, concerning his writing ambitions, is consistent with him seeing the diary and seizing an opportunity to make something of himself at last.
There is nothing on the record before Monday 9th March 1992 to show that the diary was already known about by anyone in Liverpool, or was in the planning stages in Goldie Street. You have to believe that Mike was capable of keeping his trap shut for the entire time that Anne was helping him to research and write this 'story', and then unable to stop talking about the damned thing from that day onwards.
It was Anne herself who said that she wanted Mike to write a story about Maybrick as Jack the Ripper. Or are you forgetting that?
It is not my 'theory'--it was what Anne herself said in her 'confession' to Paul Feldman.
It is not my 'theory'--it was what Anne herself said in her 'confession' to Paul Feldman.
It's bleedin' obvious that the same would apply to Mike wanting to publish the diary itself, with its account of Maybrick as Jack the Ripper, and Anne advising him against it if he can't say where it came from and doesn't know who its rightful owner might be. "Just write a story about it Michael, to be on the safe side. Even better, it will look like your own work - even if I have to help you write it as usual."
Are you forgetting the fight they had, over Mike's plan to take the physical diary to London? Mike knew he was incapable of writing such a story himself, but much more than that he wanted to be the man who would solve the greatest mystery in criminal history, so he was never going to heed Anne's advice, was he? He had a much bigger fish to fry - and the best seller he knew he could never hope to write without the help of the "old book" itself.
As far as I am concerned, the only person's opinion worth hearing about the matter is Anne Graham's.
Was she indirectly telling us what actually happened, or am I misreading her?
What she tells you, in your dreams, is your affair.
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