A New Ripper Book

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  • Christine
    replied
    Well, from what he said in the podcast, it's a statement against the whole ripper legend--man in a top hat and cape, pretty girls in corsets and silk skirts. I think he sees that sort of ripper fantasy as being tied to the idea that the first "ripper killings" were probably not even perpetrated by the same man.

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  • Jeff Leahy
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    AP and all,
    , would you package it so that it would only appeal to angry, fat teens who can't get a girl?
    or even the odd sheep perhaps Tom?

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  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by jmenges View Post
    Actually, rather than this being "more reasonable and honest" Cook insists that the reality was quite the contrary. He has said numerous times to me, in more than one conversation, that he worked closely with the publisher and had an absolute say so on what went on the cover.

    JM
    Hi JM,
    Then do you think he chose the image to use on the cover for sensationalist reasons ?

    Norma

    Tom,
    you have said it better than me here-the posts must have crossed-but that is exactly what has puzzled me over all this.
    Last edited by Natalie Severn; 05-22-2009, 12:51 AM.

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    AP and all,

    I'm confused. Is this a crass money making scheme or is it literary suicide? One would think this was some type of money-making ploy, what with the amount of press blurbs and the documentary and such. But if you were trying to make money off your research, would you package it so that it would only appeal to angry, fat teens who can't get a girl? Because, honestly, that's the only type of person who would be attracted to a cover like the one we've seen. This is the thing that has confused me the most. An author of a well-received book making such a stupid blunder AND being proud of it.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Hi Caz,
    Thanks for your post and ofcourse we are all free to interpret what a writer states the way we want.
    I am actually quite looking forward to reading the book because as I said earlier, the one book I have read by Andrew Cook [referencing Inspector Melville / the Irish question etc] addressed many areas that I am interested in and provided plausible reconstructions of certain activities -some of which could be linked back to Anderson,Monro and Littlechild.

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  • Jeff Leahy
    replied
    My guess AP would be someone called Bill Locke



    Lion Television is one of the most successful television production companies in the UK.


    I note that Lion have a new children's series 'Horrible Histories' about to start.

    Actually their history out-put is fairly impressive.

    Pirate
    Last edited by Jeff Leahy; 05-21-2009, 10:26 PM.

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  • Cap'n Jack
    replied
    It is hard to actually imagine this book on public display in a book shop, whilst carrying its present cover; and although my faith in human nature has reached an all time low after hearing Cook's ridiculous defence of his personal choice of such a blatantly provocative and commercially inspired cover, I somehow hope, and feel, that it will not be publicly displayed.
    But as Pirate points out, if the tv documentary inspired the book, then it would be useful to know from whom, and how Cook was advised to use such a cover. As I said, on the podcast Cook called himself 'we'.
    I'd like to know who that 'we' was.

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  • caz
    replied
    So Stephen, can I take it that you are a Triple Velvet man? Or a Sainsbury's own brand? Quilted or plain? Soft white or cool aqua?

    I tend to play it by ear and go for any special offers. But I'm with you. I'd be put off by an image of the 'does what it shows on the packaging' variety.

    Love,

    Caz
    XXX

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  • Stephen Thomas
    replied
    Who cares? I, for one, won't be buying it.

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  • Scotland Yard
    replied
    I keep coming across conflicting dates for when this book is released.

    I have to say, I'm intrigued by Cook's premise. Is this book out now and, if so, anyone here actually read it? I know its caused controversy on another thread for its use of the Mary Kelly photo on the cover but is it any good?

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    Finally,I am not convinced that the picture should not be on the cover.Jack was not nice,not at all nice and you cant hide from that fact when you look at the corpse of this once pretty, twenty five year old woman, who called herself Marie Jaenette Kelly.
    But Nats, the author is not using Mary's picture to show that Jack was 'not nice, not at all nice', because his aim is to show that Jack was not at all anything, having been invented by the Star, after which one of Mary's band of merry men presumably decided that she was not nice, not at all nice, and could be got rid of on the strength of this invented fiend. So Cook himself must be finding it a doddle to ‘hide’ from that very fact when he looks at her corpse. The theory is barking.

    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    ...Jack the Ripper has been somewhat glamourised over the years and his actual deeds obscured and minimised by the length of time that has passed since he committed the murders.
    Therefore it is good to let people see the monstrosity of his crimes, and the vandalism of what he actually did to those who became his knife victims.
    Isn’t Cook attempting to obscure and minimise the monstrosity and vandalism of what the ripper actually did by going into total denial mode about his very existence?

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    Last edited by caz; 05-21-2009, 02:38 PM.

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  • George Hutchinson
    replied
    Originally posted by jmenges View Post
    Actually, rather than this being "more reasonable and honest" Cook insists that the reality was quite the contrary. He has said numerous times to me, in more than one conversation, that he worked closely with the publisher and had an absolute say so on what went on the cover.

    JM
    And we certainly now know that telling convenient lies to save his own bacon is part of Mr Cook's make-up, don't we, Jonathan? Unfortunately, he has very much dug his own grave. Let's just say he won't be walking away from this book with his ethics perceptions intact, if they weren't in tatters already, and it has nothing to do with the atrocious cover.

    PHILIP

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  • Jeff Leahy
    replied
    Hi Jonathon

    Well firstly it strikes me from the podcast that there are a number of claims that don’t ring quite true. In his own admission he also claimed that he was commissioned to right the book by the TV production company, presumably Lion. So you cant help wondering if there was more than one person involved in the concept?

    However you roll the dice this cover has been perceived as ‘commercially exploitative’ and to claim you were trying to do the exact opposite by putting the ‘bake beans’ on the label of a bean tin, just seemed a little hollow, to me it seemed like an excuse.

    But let’s give Cook the benefit of the doubt break out the can opener and taste his beans. And those Beans are certainly NOT Heinz, in fact the whole premise of the book is certainly Not original. The central premise of the book, the idea of a lone serial killer was a deliberate and knowing circulation-building invention by O Conner and the Star is very far from made. As Paul stated in his question: “three extremely brutal murders in the same area and in such a short space of time would very reasonably suggest that there was a single homicidal maniac at large”,

    Again there seems another strange anomaly in Cooks reply that there were hundreds of un-reported murders, when in his book he states “murders in Whitechapel were uncommon”.

    Bizarrely in the interview he also told us to check out Scotland Yard Investigates and Letters From Hell. Both books don’t seem to support his argument about Best. In fact they do the opposite. And he doesn’t mention in his book that Best actually confessed to writing the letters, which one might have thought rather central to his theory?

    The idea that the Whitechappel murders were as a whole committed by different people is a no brainer…of course they were I havn't heard anyone making a claim for all seventeen apart from Patricia. The argument that a lone serial killer was invented by journalists to increase circulation is just another similar madcap ripper theory that will further muddy the public perception about the truth behind the crimes.

    Pirate

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  • The Good Michael
    replied
    Originally posted by jmenges View Post
    Actually, rather than this being "more reasonable and honest" Cook insists that the reality was quite the contrary. He has said numerous times to me, in more than one conversation, that he worked closely with the publisher and had an absolute say so on what went on the cover.
    It came out that way in the interview too, that it was his choice.

    Mike

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  • jmenges
    replied
    Originally posted by Pirate Jack View Post
    When in reality a simple….”actually I had no choice that’s what they decided” might have been a more reasonable and honest reply to the situation. I think you all over estimate the control authors have over their work in a commercial environment.
    Actually, rather than this being "more reasonable and honest" Cook insists that the reality was quite the contrary. He has said numerous times to me, in more than one conversation, that he worked closely with the publisher and had an absolute say so on what went on the cover.

    JM

    Leave a comment:

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