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  • Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
    I've got a brief update from Keith Skinner regarding the 'research paper' Anne failed to get published in a peer-reviewed journal. He notes:

    I know the report Martin is referring to because it was me who sent it to him - but I don't remember it being specifically commissioned by Feldman? Martin phoned me up to discuss the report and was staggered when I told him it had been prepared by Anne. But not having met Anne or knowing anything about her, why should he be staggered? That I think is the more pertinent point I regret not asking Martin at the time.
    Before I continue, please note Tom's sarcastic suggestion that this paper was intended for--and rejected by--a peer-reviewed journal. Tom (with permission, of course) could always slap a copy of this document up onto our screens so we can judge its quality for ourselves, but don't hold your breaths, dear readers, don't hold your breath.

    Moving along...

    Despite his belief to the contrary, I hold no animosity towards Keith, but I can't help wondering if his own view that the diary is a mysterious and 'fascinating' document--and one not written by the Barretts---sometimes leads him to wrongly remember the views of others as having aligned with his own, when in fact, they did not.

    For instance, last month, in justifying his decision not to release the Barrett/Gray tapes, Keith wrongly stated that Alan Gray had concluded that Mike and Anne had not written the diary, when in reality, Gray swore an affidavit in 1998 stating his belief that Anne HAD written the diary based on a storyline concocted by Tony Devereux.

    And it's certainly no mystery why Martin was 'flabbergasted' (the word he apparently used) that the report written by Anne Graham, who Martin had only known to be the unassuming wife of an unemployed scrap metal dealer, was so polished; Martin tells us why in Keith's own book, Ripper Diary: The Inside Story, p. 150.

    Martin was flabbergasted because "he now believed she could have concocted the basic story of Maybrick as the Ripper 'with one hand behind her back.'

    It's really no great mystery is it?

    Except perhaps to one who went on to see first-hand Anne's research skills and now forgets that this skill was not self-evident to others.

    Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
    It's also worth adding that Martin Fido concluded that Anne could not have written the diary because she would be incapable of solecisms and making spelling mistakes. Martin also acknowledged the handwriting in the diary was not the same as Anne's.
    I think Keith may be forgetting that this was not the full story, and Martin was evidently only referring to the penmanship of the finished product and a mistaken belief that Anne was a better speller than she was, based solely on this one report.

    On 22 March 2001, Martin expanded upon his suspicions by offering up a 'scenario' of how the diary could have come to be: Anne had composed the diary on Mike's word processor (as a work of fiction?) and then Mike took this work of fiction and turned it into the physical diary, complete with spelling errors and solecisms.

    Click image for larger version  Name:	Fido's Theory.jpg Views:	0 Size:	97.8 KB ID:	826147

    I was impressed by Martin's theory when I recently came across it again, not having remembered it, but I confess it is because I had already come to the same conclusion many years ago. I still believe that it has considerable explanatory power. I've been told by Caz, however, that it is madness--utter insanity to believe Mike and Anne could have written the diary---so I must be content to be confined to the same asylum that the late Martin Fido should have been confined---Martin, the university professor, writer, broadcaster, Shakespeare scholar, and madman.

    What Martin could not have known is that the 'professional' report Keith had given to him was not characteristic of Anne's private correspondence, as published on these forums by David Barrart, for it shows the similar spelling errors that we see in the diary. In particular, both Anne and the diarist had trouble with homophones. I was also informed years ago that Anne had a habit of tossing out the occasional malaprop (there's an embarrassing one in Ripper Diary) and we see the diarist's 'gorge out an eye'--a malaprop for 'gouge.'

    So, in conclusion, I think Martin didn't have all the necessary documentation at his disposal, but he was (in my opinion) very close to the mark. And this does not make Anne a 'hoaxer'--but rather, the victim of an abusive husband, and I strongly suspect that she eventually realized what his true aim was, but went along with it because 'one didn't say no to Mike,' and also because she believed that Doreen would 'just send Mike packing' once she laid her eyes on the relic--which is what Anne herself said she thought would happen. But how wrong she was, and the rest is history.


    Last edited by rjpalmer; 11-24-2023, 09:09 PM.

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    • Originally posted by caz View Post
      Alan Gray had 'seen' a cassette first-hand? Wow.

      Not 'listened' to it?

      Strange use of words if this was more than just a label on a cassette, shown to Gray by a suspected forger. But we can't have everything, can we?
      This is one of the strangest comments ever made on the Maybrick forum.

      What is being suggested?

      That Barrett took a blank cassette tape and put a phony label on it, so Gray would wrongly conclude that Mike had interviewed Dorothy Wright, and thus wrongly reveal to the world the writing career that Barrett himself had tried to hide?

      A writing career that has now been documented?

      It sounds more than a little desperate, Caz, if you don't mind me saying.

      And your own book doesn't state anything about Mike 'showing' this to Gray or Gray already suspecting Mike of being the 'forger.' Gray supposedly spotted it and then began to wonder...

      So, as I see it, you are quite probably mischaracterizing what happened to fit your 'narrative.'

      Goodbye.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by erobitha View Post

        It’s not too late to change your mind RD.

        Keith Skinner emailed me to offer you some advice:

        ”Without wishing to discourage or influence RD in any way, I would suggest to him/her that the first thing he/ she has to decide is whether the diary is a modern hoax - and I would suggest he/she read all of R.J.Palmer's contributions and Lord Orsam's diary to help him/her to reach a conclusion. If RD is persuaded by their arguments that the diary was created by Mike and Anne Barrett, then all discussion about FM on the wall and whether JM was JTR becomes irrelevant.”
        Wise words from Keith, and quite right. The diary debate is a convoluted thing, and far from simple, it has complex characters and facts and findings that are far from clear at the best of times. I wholeheartedly endorse Keith's view, I'd add reading Ike's "Society's Pillar" to that list, because an even and open minded view needs to encompass all the literature. Keith understandably wouldn't mention this particular dissertation as he doesn't think Maybrick was Jack, but for anyone new to the debate I'd highly recommend it. Even the most hardened sceptic can't get around some of the fortuitous luck the hoaxer had, if of course, it was luck at all. Start from scratch, be convinced of nothing without the facts, read both sides of the argument and don't be afraid to change your mind. The Maybrick Diary is characterised by deception and changing stories, and no one will pick it up quickly. Feelings run high, and independent discourse can soon be replaced by partisan rhetoric. Keep in mind, the evidence for some provenance claims hasn't been fully released, if at all, but also the modern hoax isn't without its own pitfalls. Draw your own conclusions, from what information is available.

        (Ero, I appreciate this isn't exactly a reply to you per se, but since your the medium, I've gone through you.)
        Thems the Vagaries.....

        Comment


        • I think someone should probably review the new code of conduct, Makus, paying particular attention to items 7 & 8.

          Major Rules - Casebook: Jack the Ripper Forums

          Your posts don't seem to serve any other purpose other than to inflame and harass.

          But thank goodness for the 'mute' button.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
            I think someone should probably review the new code of conduct, Makus, paying particular attention to items 7 & 8.

            Major Rules - Casebook: Jack the Ripper Forums

            Your posts don't seem to serve any other purpose other than to inflame and harass.

            But thank goodness for the 'mute' button.

            Thank you, RJ.
            However, if I wasn’t interested in the topic under discussion (unhealthy so) I might have missed this post. A friendly reminder to use the report post button if you see something out of line.

            JM

            Comment


            • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

              1. In the first edition of The Diary of Jack the Ripper (1993) there was not a PEEP about Barrett previously having been a writer. Nothing to suggest it whatsoever. In fact, we were told (falsely) that after receiving the diary in 1991, Barrett only then bought a word processor in order to write the diary's story for himself, but he was over his head, and thus he ultimately contacted a literary agent.

              2. Yet, even before this, but not included in Harrison's book, Martin Chittenden in the Sunday Times' included an interesting but unexplained snippet that Barrett had written word puzzles for a children's magazine, Look-In. This doesn't sound to me like something that Mike would have spontaneously revealed. I have a theory about why and how Chittenden discovered this, but I'll leave my theories out of it.

              3. In subsequent editions of Harrison's book, a slow drip of information begins to morph Barrett from a scrap metal dealer into to a bloke who did a spot of writing, but never on any professional level. In Harrison's "Blake" edition, she now includes the Look-In bit, and admits that Barrett belonged to a local writer's circle, but for me, this only leaves the more discerning members of the public to wonder why this hadn't been said earlier, since any rational person knows that it should have been reported.
              I now realize that I left out two important details to the timeline posted earlier.

              So, adding to the above:

              4. In the July 1994 edition of Ripperana, Nick Warren revealed that Barrett had worked as a journalist in the 1980s--a fact Warren had learned while interviewing the Devereux Sisters. This revelation came AFTER Barrett had already confessed, and not during the two years he was marketed himself as an ex-scrap metal dealer. If any diary researcher was aware of Barrett's career before Warren, they have not, to my knowledge, said anything.

              5. Shirley Harrison (apparently alerted by Warren's article?) chases down Mike's old publisher at Celebrity magazine and received copies of three of Mike's articles, receiving them in November 1994. (Four months after the Ripperana article).

              This gives a better understanding of how the news of Barrett's writing career came to be known. It came from someone (Warren) asking questions and not by anything Barrett had revealed on his own.

              I leave you with this: a copy of one of Barrett's articles--not the best of the bunch, in my opinion--but characteristic. This one is from Celebrity in June 1987, and you can judge for yourself if this is anything that would have 'embarrassed' Barrett--who admitted he was an unemployed scrap metal merchant--or if this alleged "embarrassment" is really a plausible reason for Barrett having withheld his writing career as Tom Mitchell now argues.

              Click image for larger version  Name:	Celebrity June 1987.jpg Views:	0 Size:	289.6 KB ID:	826173
              Click image for larger version  Name:	Celebrity June 1987 B.jpg Views:	0 Size:	240.3 KB ID:	826174
              Last edited by rjpalmer; 11-24-2023, 11:59 PM.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
                I think someone should probably review the new code of conduct, Makus, paying particular attention to items 7 & 8.

                Major Rules - Casebook: Jack the Ripper Forums

                Your posts don't seem to serve any other purpose other than to inflame and harass.

                But thank goodness for the 'mute' button.

                Who is Makus and what did they say?
                Iconoclast
                Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post

                  Who is Makus and what did they say?
                  It doesn't matter.
                  Move along.

                  JM

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
                    4. In the July 1994 edition of Ripperana, Nick Warren revealed that Barrett had worked as a journalist in the 1980s--a fact Warren had learned while interviewing the Devereux Sisters. This revelation came AFTER Barrett had already confessed, and not during the two years he was marketed himself as an ex-scrap metal dealer. If any diary researcher was aware of Barrett's career before Warren, they have not, to my knowledge, said anything.
                    I really must protest at the use of the expression "worked as a journalist in the 1980s" and insist that a more accurate representation of Barrett's very brief and very occasional dalliance into the world of literature should be described as "attempted to forge a career as a writer in the 1980s". Getting twenty articles published is not to be sniffed at, but nor does the whole body of Mike's output nor even a single example of it reach much above the level of dabbling dilletante (doubtless a term that was impossible to use in Victorian times but perfect for our scrap metal hero of the Thatcher years).

                    And I very much doubt that Nick Warren tracked down the source of Barrett creative juices. I assume Barrett just told him. How else would Warren have uncovered this? And - if Barrett revealed it to Warren (as seems inevitable) - who else did he reveal it to who didn't have the viper Warren's insidious drive to uncover a fraud and therefore just laughed it off as 'child's play' (which - in literary terms - it literally was in part). Nothing to see here, RJ.

                    5. Shirley Harrison (apparently alerted by Warren's article?) chases down Mike's old publisher at Celebrity magazine and received copies of three of Mike's articles, receiving them in November 1994. (Four months after the Ripperana article).
                    I think you weren't there so let's change "chases down" to the more plausible "sought". No-one bar the nest of vipers had any concerns about Barrett's more than humble attempts at Hemingway, RJ, so you should not be working creatively on a back story for which you do not have clear and obvious evidence. Stop re-refereeing history, RJ, that's my advice. That's not what your role is, mate. Pack your bags and get yourself out of Stockley Park, you've been relegated to the National League (being American, you may want to Google what 'relegation' means in a sporting context).

                    This gives a better understanding of how the news of Barrett's writing career came to be known.
                    It does no such thing, and you know it. We don't know how Warren knew and that's the relevant bit, not what he then did with that information.

                    It came from someone (Warren) asking questions ...
                    Of whom were these questions asked by the arch-viper-in-chief?

                    ... and not by anything Barrett had revealed on his own.
                    You do not know this to be true. Either tell us how Warren uncovered Barrett's brilliant literary past or else do not make claims you cannot substantiate. My dear readers deserve so much better than this.

                    I leave you with this: a copy of one of Barrett's articles--not the best of the bunch, in my opinion--but characteristic. This one is from Celebrity in June 1987, and you can judge for yourself if this is anything that would have 'embarrassed' Barrett ...
                    Not sure what relevance citing a random article is if there's the known influence of his wife's 'tidying-up' and the certainty of editorial alteration - but if anyone is interested, I've got all of Mike's Celebrity articles (ironically, thanks to the generosity of the Dark Lord of Dark Darkness himself who sent me the one I foolishly forgot to photograph in my excitement at getting close to the end of the 1,080 articles I photographed of this most prestigious doctor's-waiting-room-come-emergency-toilet-paper periodical) so - if you want to see more - just let me know at historyvsmaybrick@gmail.com (I think that's the right address).

                    Ike
                    Generous to a Fault
                    Iconoclast
                    Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post
                      I'd add reading Ike's "Society's Pillar" to that list, because an even and open minded view needs to encompass all the literature ... for anyone new to the debate I'd highly recommend it.
                      A very good summary of the need to read both sides of the argument, Abe, which I fear my dear readers occasionally don't fully do. That's a euphemism, by the way, if anyone missed it.

                      But can I politely remind you that it is my brilliant Society's Pillar - the eventual forerunner to what the literary experts are already describing in hushed anticipation as my remarkable Society's Pillar 2025 (available in all good browsers, probably in 2026)?

                      Notwithstanding your forgetful adjective, I thought your post (#10443) was excellent, old chum.

                      Ike
                      Iconoclast
                      Materials: HistoryvsMaybrick – Dropbox

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
                        I think you weren't there so let's change "chases down" to the more plausible "sought".
                        I think you weren't there, Ike, so I'll stick with 'chased down.' I doubt Shirley had a sudden urge to explore the life of Bonnie Langford.

                        The way I picture it, she chased down copies of Barret's old articles with a growing sense of dread, confusion, and downright horror at the thought that the man she had previously dismissed as unremarkable bloke on disability was actually a struggling freelance journalist--precisely the type that turns to literary forgery when the well of inspiration has dried, and their source of income (Celebrity) has closed down. Who do you think writes literary forgeries? Jane Austen and Vladimir Nabokov? It's always the struggling bloke with minor talent.

                        What I find wildly convenient, but entirely implausible, is your strange theory that Barrett was embarrassed (and thus silent) about having published 20+ articles in a national magazine, but instead opted to portray himself as an unemployed scrap dealer with a bad back and a wife forced to be the bread winner. Lord knows, that's a great look to run up the flagpole.

                        As is so often the case, you're looking at it backwards.

                        Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
                        You do not know this to be true. Either tell us how Warren uncovered Barrett's brilliant literary past or else do not make claims you cannot substantiate. My dear readers deserve so much better than this.
                        Your dear readers deserve someone with reading comprehension skills, Ike. You were already told that Nick Warren was alerted to Barrett's literary past by the Devereux Sisters. Do I have to write in a large, purple-colored font, four inches high?

                        I think I'll now disappear for ten or twelve days so you can regroup and reflect on the errors in your thinking. See you in December.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

                          Well, I did get it a bit mixed up--as aways, I'm left wondering why Keith doesn't simply log-on to his still current account instead of relying on a postman who is in love with color-coded messages and small, medium, and large fonts. My mistake, though.

                          Either way, all my points are still relevant and on point. I doubt Keith thinks Anne is a 'fool.' Whether he still think she was incapable of hoaxing I'll leave for him to answer.

                          He hasn't given the whole story about Martin Fido, either.
                          What concerns me about Palmer's mistake here is not that he missed the colour-coded clues in Ike's post to whose 'voice' was whose, but that he was entirely unable to distinguish Ike's words from Keith's, from the tone and use of language alone, even after so many years of reading and responding to both.

                          I am left wondering how any kind of useful comparison could be made between the diary's use of language and that of Mike or Anne, from what little has been made public of their provably unaided writing, by anyone who admits to being fooled by Ike's words, imagining they were in fact Keith's.

                          Chalk and cheese, anyone?
                          "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post

                            Let's be clear here (because I can't be arsed to check for myself): was Lord Orsam of Barrat the first person to ever uncover that articles had been written by Mike Barrett or was the fact that he had had articles published in his name in two-bit rags already on the record and all Barrat did was locate them? In terms of red flags, there's an obvious world of difference between these two scenarios. In one, it's a secret kept from everyone for nefarious purposes until Lord Orsam brilliantly uncovered it (once again proving himself to be the dark matter to Keith Skinner's matter); and - in the other - it's a known claim which Lord Orsam successfully turned into a fact which was interesting but hardly the point (if the claim had already been made). Which is it (as I say, I can't be arsed to check)?

                            For the record, I suspect it was the latter: that Mike Barrett had already admitted on more than one occasion that he had attempted a literary career in the 1980s (and had failed miserably) and all Lord O of the Dark Lands of Yore had done was track down his wonderfully average output.

                            Obviously, we all know exactly what point is attempted to be conveyed here: a red flag, a red flag, we've got a red flag and it's turned me into a newt!

                            It's not a red flag any more than I am (or ever was) a newt, if anyone is wondering.
                            I'm still far from clear what this 'red flag' is supposed to signal, regarding the true origins of the diary.

                            Is it redder than the red flag which accompanies the combined witness testimony of all those who have associated Eddie Lyons with the diary, going back to July 1992, when Eddie himself admitted to Brian Rawes that he had found something "important" under the floorboards of Maybrick's old house? Red flags don't come much clearer and brighter than that.

                            If Palmer can allow himself to imagine just for a second, that Eddie might have been talking to Brian about the diary, in which case it had to be found in March 1992 and quickly passed on to Mike, I'm sure he could then imagine how quickly Mike's magazine articles from the previous decade might have been filed away in his mind under "ancient history", as the import of seeing Jack the Ripper's diary, no less, struck him like a thunderbolt and took hold, to become his obsession for the 1990s - which nobody could surely deny the diary did indeed become, and a very unhealthy one at that.

                            It becomes a circular argument if one starts from just the Barrett hoax perspective, in order to see a potentially suspicious motive for Anne - as well as Mike - not to mention his previous literary ventures, in case everyone immediately suspects him of faking an interview with the Whitechapel fiend, reproduced in diary form.

                            Didn't Anne freely admit that she had advised Mike to write a story based on what was in the diary? Is that a sign that she was doing her best to hide the fact that he had writing ambitions dating back before the diary was offered to Doreen? Or did she not have any particular reason for mentioning Mike's magazine articles because a) she wasn't asked, and b) she saw no relevance with a diary that he had no hand in writing himself?

                            Love,

                            Caz
                            X
                            "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
                              I'm not aware that Caz has ever said that she can't see what is being referred to, has she? Maybe she could clarify for us? Caz, when I talk about the 'FM' which is so obvious on Kelly's wall, are you left in complete bemusement each time, stumbling into doors and falling into manholes and utterly unable to at least identify that which is being discussed?
                              Afternoon Ike,

                              I think I'll leave Palmer to answer this one. He appears to have the time and incentive I lack, to hunt down ancient posts of mine, to 'prove' something or other about my current thinking, and to show how hopelessly you and I must be at odds.

                              All I can recall saying about the references to initials in the diary is that 'Sir Jim' leaves them open to interpretation - which is a sure sign to some that the Barretts chose to leave things safely vague and vaguely safe, so nothing could be disproved. This neatly sidesteps the fact that we are meant to be reading the private ramblings of a killer who presumably knows what the initials are all about without needing to explain it to himself in writing. Had 'Sir Jim' done so, and spelled out everything in the finest detail for the dullest reader to go: "Ah, I see what he meant there!", we'd all have seen the red flags from miles away. Nice and vague is therefore no more than what we should have expected, no matter who wrote the damned thing, and as much a red herring as a red flag in the great scheme of things.

                              I have always understood your argument, however, that the Barretts did not see an F or an M on the wall, or an F looking like it could have been carved on Kelly's forearm, in a crime scene photo, and decide to put this to good use in a fake diary identifying Florie Maybrick's hubby as Jack the Ripper. When the first person [Martin Fido?] read the diary and associated its main theme with possible initials on the wall behind Kelly in the photo, a spell was cast which the Barretts could not have foreseen, but would presumably have been jolly chuffed about, especially if the diary had reflected their own handiwork.

                              Love,

                              Caz
                              X
                              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
                                For the first time, we can fully appreciate not only that Barret was a freelance writer in the 1980s, but the interesting fact that his main audience and financial supprt had dried up because Celebrity went defunct. Barrett was left scrambling to make his mortgage payment, dreaming of new writing ventures to bring in the much-needed cash. Danny the Dolphin Boy wasn't cutting it, and what Barrett really needed was a best-seller--and fast.
                                Too right, Danny the Dolphin Boy wasn't 'cutting it'. We have Alan Gray to thank for telling it like it was. By 1998, he was ready to tell Mike some hard home truths: "Michael you can't write, you can't even lie properly these days, you're pathetic. You made an attempt with a story - 'Daniel the Dolphin Boy' - what a load of rubbish."

                                This "load of rubbish" would have been written without Anne's help, and with no in-house writer to make the result fit for publication. But back in the 1980s we are asked to believe that Mike's interviews could have been transcribed, submitted and published more or less unedited, whether the written work was done by Mike or Anne.

                                And then, in the early 1990s, we are asked to believe that Mike did it again with the story of 'James the Serial Mutilator', which Anne had largely composed in the belief that he would be submitting it as his own fictional take on the ripper murders. Barrett may have dreamed of having a best-seller, but the reality is that he would never have achieved it on his own, nor with his wife, nor even with the assistance of an experienced in-house editor. The only way he could have guaranteed that his dreams would ever come true - at least for a short while until the wheels fell off - was if he saw that old book with Jack the Ripper's name in it and set about making it his own.

                                If the diary text had reflected his own, or Anne's handiwork, and had been submitted to a popular magazine as a fictional story, there is no way on God's green earth that it would ever have been published without heavy editing, to correct all its glaring grammatical and spelling errors, and the abysmal use of punctuation throughout. It's highly doubtful that the Barretts would have pointed out that the mistakes were all deliberate, and intended to portray 'Sir Jim' as a tragi-comic figure who butchered prostitutes on the streets of London, before butchering the prose and poetry when recording it all in the pages of his diary.

                                So how does Palmer explain all those errors in the guard book, if Anne had been responsible for introducing them, or at least transferring them from an existing typescript? We are told she could take her sweet time over it when Mike came home with the guard book, if no date had been set for taking the finished article to London. But then we encounter the rotten spelling of 'rendezvous' on page one, as if she had been under pressure from day one to get on with it. Why did Mike settle for Monday 13th April for his meeting with Doreen and Shirley, creating a deadline for Anne of Sunday 12th when there was no need, if she was quickly aware of all the mistakes she was making, that could have been avoided by slowing right down?

                                Something is not right with any of this, and it really doesn't help to argue that Mike's published articles would have needed little or no in-house attention, because Anne was perfectly competent to transcribe his interviews using correct spelling and punctuation, and to edit out any grammatical errors made by the interviewee. The diary stands as evidence to the contrary if it is supposed to reflect her own handiwork.

                                And here we are again, with the other little problem of who is qualified to match up the diary's vocabulary and sentence structure with any of Mike or Anne's written work.

                                I may have a slightly unfair advantage, due to seeing letters and words as different colours. I tend to get a colour palette with a writer's unique vocabulary range and frequency, and their sentence structure, which remains broadly consistent in their writing and a bit like a signature, so this helps me to recognise a writer just from their writing. The colour palette will vary from one writer to the next, emphasising the differences or similarities.

                                If Anne had composed the diary, it would not have been just her handwriting in need of an effective disguise; she'd have had to channel her inner karma chameleon and change her recognisable vocabulary range and usual sentence structure - and this has little to do with having basic writing skills. If she only thought she was helping to create a work of fiction, with a stab at mock-Victorian handwriting, I'd have expected to see her true colours 'shinning' through, unaware of any need to change them.
                                "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


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