Originally posted by rjpalmer
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Or have I missed where you provided a direct quote from Anne to prove your point?
This is decidedly not my 'theory,' and, as always, you have constructed some bizarre meaning of your own in order to critique it. You're making a dog's breakfast of it--deliberately, no doubt--but if it wiles away your time, I'm glad to have helped.
I never said this was Anne's 'idea,' nor did I ever suggest that 'she did all the researching herself.' These are your own inventions.
I'm not sure how it helps you if it was someone else's idea to write about Maybrick being Jack the Ripper, and someone else's research that made him seem like a good bet. Would Anne not have needed to check everything Mike brought to the Goldie Street table, before committing a single word to his word processor, for the fatal blunders he was bound to make if let loose on turning his own idea into reality? Or did you have Tony Devereux in mind, with no evidence that Anne knew this man better than she knew Mike, and could therefore have trusted him instead with such an idea? Or perhaps it was Billy Graham who is meant to have put the idea in his daughter's head, forgetting what a total liability his son-in-law was?
It exposes yet again your muddled thinking. First, you have me gullibly lapping up the Barrett/Gray affidavit as gospel (which has Tony and Mike and Anne coming up with the concept together, and the general plotting) and then--in practically the same breath-- you have me supposedly believing that Anne did everything herself from start to finish and that it was "her novella."
Nothing like consistency when attacking someone's alleged "theory"!
Nothing like consistency when attacking someone's alleged "theory"!
It might help if you had taken us line by line through the affidavit, saying what you believed to be true and what you accepted as false, and how each and every false detail, including the troublesome dates, could have been the result of a memory shot to pieces by booze, and not a deliberate lie by a man whose memory for dates and all manner of other details was sound enough before he swore the affidavit, and went through a miraculous recovery immediately afterwards - every bit as miraculous as the auction ticket, but at least in evidence so there can be no disputing it.
What I actually suspect is that Graham was the primary author--I think I once threw out a rough estimate of her writing 90% of the text--but I do hope you can appreciate the difference between an initial concept, the necessary research and the actual writing?
Do you think these are invariably all the same act and done by the same person?
Have you never heard of researchers, and co-authors, and ghost-writers, and consultants, and writing assistants, etc? Or even just a kibitzer standing over someone's shoulder in Goldie Street?
Do you think these are invariably all the same act and done by the same person?
Have you never heard of researchers, and co-authors, and ghost-writers, and consultants, and writing assistants, etc? Or even just a kibitzer standing over someone's shoulder in Goldie Street?
Why do you think I believe Anne did all the leg work when Barrett stated that Tony Devereux helped him greatly with the concept? Wasn't Mike's copy of Tales of Liverpool known to have been in Tony's possession, and haven't I mentioned this on many occasions?
It is not 'fraud' to create the Diary of Jack the Ripper on one's home word processor. It is not illegal to write-up a Ripper theory in the guise of a confessional diary as a marketing ploy-especially if one's husband has convinced you that it will be sold as nothing more than a work of fiction and the publishers will be alerted to this fact when he duly arrives in London.
So no, Caz, you're wrong, I'm afraid. It only becomes fraud if one sells it as the real deal. I think the details of the purchase of the red diary--with Barrett being put down as a late payer--suggest he bought it behind Anne's back. It suggests to me that she hadn't been initially involved in the scheme, other than helping him write a work of fiction. No hoaxer is going to draw further attention to themselves by being a late payer when they are trying to obtain their raw materials. I take it to be more evidence of Barrett's conniving ways.
And I'm afraid it becomes fraud from the moment Anne learns what Mike is trying to claim for her work of fiction and she not only does nothing to stop him, but gets actively involved in preparing a bogus set of research notes for him to again pass off as genuine.
Anne Graham was upset that Barrett was peddling a hoax and they would both be arrested for fraud--(even though I personally think she had been coerced).
Anne said she had tried to 'burn the diary.' The last time I checked, most stoves are kept on top of the kitchen floor--which refers back to Caroline's account. The wrestling match was when Anne tried to burn the diary in the stove--that's what I think. She may have even tried to burn the diary in the stove when Barrett was attempting to slow dry the ink or dry the spot where he had removed the maker's stamp of 1908/1909 after daubing or soaking the inside cover with linseed oil or some similar solvent. The idea that he plopped the whole diary in a bedpan of linseed oil is more tomfoolery, a ridiculous interpretation in order to dismiss a reasonable one, since it has never been disputed that the inside cover does have suspicious damage which would be consistent with someone removing a tell-tale date from a guardbook of World War I photos, a 20–30-pound expenditure as estimated by the contemporary manager at Outhwaite and Litherland.
Nobody has given me any rational reason why Anne couldn't have helped Barrett create the typescript, or why she couldn't have been coerced and bullied and manipulating into helping him.
There's no reason why Lechmere couldn't have been the ripper and lied his way out of trouble in Buck's Row, but you wouldn't let Christer get away with that kind of argument for a second.
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