Hope folks won't mind if I plug my new book 'American Jack', re-examining Ripper suspects with American connections, available for Kindle and as a paperback. Just launched the paperback yesterday.
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American Jack: Jack the Ripper and the United States
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Hi Simon
I'm sure that no one will complain about you plugging your new book. I'll get it as soon as I've reduced my pile of 'still to read' books!
Best of luck with it. I'm sure that there's a space for a new thread for a discussion of your research.
Regards
HerlockRegards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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In case anyone's interested, here's the URL to buy the book for Kindle in the UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/American-Ja...ack+simon+webb
And in the US: https://www.amazon.com/American-Jack...+american+jack
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Here's the blurb for the book, by the way:
'Dear Boss - I keep on hearing the police have caught me but they won't fix me just yet.'
Was Jack the Ripper an American, or had he lived in the United States? Did he commit any of the Ripper-style murders carried out in the U.S. in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries?
Simon Webb's first non-fiction book about the Whitechapel killer re-tells the stories of the murders usually attributed to this mysterious figure, and re-examines the evidence surrounding a number of suspects with American connections.
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Originally posted by Simon Webb View PostIn case anyone's interested, here's the URL to buy the book for Kindle in the UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/American-Ja...ack+simon+webb
And in the US: https://www.amazon.com/American-Jack...+american+jack
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No problem PaulB - UK Amazon is here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/American-Ja...ack+simon+webb
US Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/American-Jack...ack+simon+webb
And it'd be great to see a copy of the review.
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Suspects covered in the book
The suspects I cover in the book, who all had connections with the U.S., are as follows: George Chapman, Jack Gibson, John Kelly, Arbie La Bruckman, Neill Cream, Black Elk, Robert Donston Stephenson, Francis Tumblety and James Maybrick.
True, Stephenson's links to America may just have been figments of his imagination, but he's a fascinating suspect anyway. Stephenson also brought with himself into the book the occultist Aleister Crowley, who is not a suspect but claimed to know who Jack was.
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Black Elk? Is this related to the presence of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show?Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
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Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
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Yes he was in the UK because of Cody and then continued with another, similar show led by a Mexican Joe, about whom I've been able to discover very little (by contrast there's a lot of information, and several books, on Cody). In American Jack I try to cover both sides of every argument, but I have to admit that he's a very unlikely suspect. Great excuse to read the main book about him, Black Elk Speaks though. One of the many problems relating to him as a suspect is what I'd call 'The Moustache Question'. Black Elk never seems to have had any facial hair, and the Ripper witnesses often seem to have seen men with 'taches.
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Originally posted by Simon Webb View PostYes he was in the UK because of Cody and then continued with another, similar show led by a Mexican Joe, about whom I've been able to discover very little (by contrast there's a lot of information, and several books, on Cody). In American Jack I try to cover both sides of every argument, but I have to admit that he's a very unlikely suspect. Great excuse to read the main book about him, Black Elk Speaks though. One of the many problems relating to him as a suspect is what I'd call 'The Moustache Question'. Black Elk never seems to have had any facial hair, and the Ripper witnesses often seem to have seen men with 'taches.
"Mexican Joe": (Colonel Joseph Shelley). His Wonderful Life! Exploits! and Adventures! Aldine Publishing Company, 1890.]
Another cowboy suspect was 'Colorado Charley' - real name Charley Utter - a friend of Wild Bill Hickock (see Agnes Wright Spring, Good Little Bad Man: The Life of Colorado Charley Utter. Pruett Publishing, 1987) Sometime after February 1880 Utter disappears from the pages of history.
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Thanks PaulB. Looks like fakery, fake news and con artistry are not just 21st century concerns. An issue I came across when researching American Jack was whether Black Elk and his companions were tricked into missing Cody's boat or whether it was just an accident: on balance I think it was accidental as even people who have excellent English and have lived in the UK all their lives still miss trains, planes, etc.
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