I think it boils down to two things: The suspect presented, and how the author chooses to present the suspect. I don't believe that all suspect books are 'the same' or that they are somehow bad. A lot of them are, but then a lot are valuable. In the case of Cook, I don't blame him for seeking the opinion of a graphologist and then publishing his findings. But pretending that some woman's opinion of handwriting "proves" Best wrote the Dear Boss letter is not only misrepresentative of the evidence, it's irresponsible of him as an author. But none of this invalidates the fact that he discovered a letter of value to the investigation which - once published- can be scrutinized by people with more objectivity.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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