Originally posted by PaulB
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Last I heard she aims to explore the lives of the members of the Music Hall Ladies Guild who first became suspicious of Crippen and who initially notified the police, and that of Charlotte Bell Crippen, his first wife who was possibly murdered in Salt Lake City and of course Cora Crippen. The book's focus will be on the women.
With regards to Cora, I believe she'll argue that the press and subsequent authors took Dr. Crippen's self-serving portrayal of his deceased wife (a nag, spendthrift, blowzy, over-sexed, addicted to drink) straight to heart and have been unjustifiably maligning Cora for the past 100 years.
I believe HR has researched the life of Charlotte Bell Crippen back to Ireland along with her family members who stayed in Ireland to whom Charlotte wrote saying that Dr. Crippen was experimenting on her and might kill her.
So if she does manage to give us a good book about these women, it has the potential to be the most information that's ever appeared about them before.
One problem might be- who will care? I could be the only person on the planet who would enjoy such a book.
A second problem might be- given the "padding" in 'The Five' and how much was already known by Ripperologists about the Ripper's victims, we could easily spot the new information (not much) the old information (quite a lot) and the fictional information (barrels full). Will the reader be able to discern the difference when the real lives that she's 'novelizing' aren't very well known?
JM
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