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Jack the Ripper's Secret Confession-(Monaghan, 2010)

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  • Uncle Jack
    replied
    David makes an extremely strong case for Walter, whoever he may be. As with most suspects, I am not 100% convinced but he is certainly more convincing than Robert Mann, the suspect in the lastest book released.

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Hi David,

    Thanks for that. Very interesting stuff. I'm still reading the book (on about pg 150), though it's been slow going due to lack of time. I'm waiting until I finish to comment further, but it seems some points of our research are overlapping (my preferred suspect was a particular pimp), so that's exciting.

    I ordered your book at the same time as Andrew Cook's and M.J. Trow's. Of the three, yours is the only one that doesn't boast on the cover 'SOON TO BE A MAJOR TV DOCUMENTARY'. Of course, the irony of this is that you're a TV director!

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • David Monaghan
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    Constance Kent was clearly guilty, although it's possible she acted along with her brother. Regarding 'Secret Confession', I'm reserving complete judgement until I've finished the book, but I've been impressed so far. Monaghan referenced a report regarding the Tabram murder that I've scarcely seen mentioned by other researchers and that rather impressed me. Also, a good deal of My Secret Life is probably not fiction while some of it certainly is.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott
    Tom,
    thanks for giving the book a chance. Jack The Ripper's Secret Confession is a pretty tough read and is meant to be. It's tells two colliding narratives - the arrival of a new era of sexual control with the Criminal Amendment Act of 1885 raising the age of consent to 16 years, and the the psychological signs of the unravelling of Walter that point to him as the Ripper. Reading Walter's My Secret Life is a horror show. Not only is it badly and confusingly written (sometimes purposely so), the deep meaning of the need to psychopathically control and hurt women is deeply unpleasant. I've put together a short primer of the points raised to guide debate. You may food for thought.

    Jack
    The Ripper's Secret Confession
    30 points to Walter, author of "My Secret Life"
    as Jack the Ripper
    Geographic profile, links to crime scene
    evidence, motive, means, claimed connection to
    victims and, primarily, a unique and extreme violent
    fetish pattern make Walter as Jack the Ripper.

    1) Walter uses “low whores”
    in East London during bouts of poverty. He hates himself for
    doing so.
    2) Walter is a violent sexual
    sadist.
    3) Walter is a blood fetishist.
    He describes causing bloodshed of 20 women and girls during
    sexual acts.
    4) Walter uses knives for sex
    purposes, carrying blades to make peep
    holes.
    5) Walter sexualised slit
    throats. In 1888 he likened female genitals to “the slit
    throat of a dog”.
    6) Walter commits his first
    rape, of a servant, at 16.
    7) Walter became a serial rapist
    of country girls in his early 20s.8) At age 21, Walter rapes an
    unconscious women later found “half murdered” in East
    London.
    9) In middle age, piercing
    female flesh – the hymen – becomes Walter’s
    obsession
    10)
    Walter threatens prostitutes with weapons. He wields a
    poker to “smash” a dress lodger and her madam during a
    row
    .11)Walter is fascinated by blade-wielding rape. On hearing of a
    rapist who subdued his victim by holding a razor to her
    throat, he acts out the scenario on a sex partner. When he
    learns another paramour had been threatened with murder by
    sword during a gang raped by soldiers, he obsessively seeks
    out details of the attack.
    12) Walter has homicidal urges. He rapes he wife while imagining
    “murdering her” after running from the police following
    rough street sex,. Walter “determined to murder” the
    child Pol during her rape, and tells her he will kill her.
    After paying for buggery, Walter wants to kick the man he
    had sex with and swears to kill anyone who learns about
    it.
    13) Walter knows Whitechapel. He had based
    himself at the Gunmaker’s Proofhouse in Commercial Road
    Aldgate for stalking women and voyeurism. This is within a
    four minute escape radius of all Whitechapel murder
    sites.
    14) The Ripper was said to have medical
    knowledge. Walter bys medical books and repeatedly pretends
    to be a doctor. He studies female sex organs, sketching
    internal genitalia with a surgeon who had “dissected
    virgins”. He acts as a surgery assistant in live
    examination of two women.
    15) Walter developed a fetish for having prostitutes directly
    after they had been serviced during street sex. His practice
    is to shadow women to places of assignation
    unseen
    .16) Walter associated pursuing street prostitutes with
    bloodsports, wearing a hunting outfit to trawl for sex in
    Dundee. He describes being sexual aroused while out killing
    Game
    .17) Walter disguised his identity while pursuing prostitutes in
    Tower Hill, dressing as a sailor and in working man’s cap.
    Men wearing similar clothes were seen on the night of the
    murder of Stride and Eddowes
    .18) Martha Tabram is killed in a George’s Yard stairwell.
    Walter describes stalking a short, “hook nosed” older
    prostitute, who he previously threatened “to smash”, to
    a secluded spot in order to frighten her.
    19) Mary Ann Nichols was found with an unexplained bonnet.
    Walter details his tactics of giving bonnets as sexual
    inducements.
    20) Mary Ann Nichols had a clean white handkerchief, and Liz
    Stride had two handkerchiefs. Walter would offer
    handkerchiefs as payment to destitute
    prostitutes
    21) The Ripper used a scarf worn by Liz Stride to align the cutting
    of her throat. Walter used scarves as sexual presents,
    positioning them on women’s neck as a lever for sexual
    groping.
    22) Annie Chapman carried pills at her death provided apparently
    by an unknown doctor. Walter’s pretended to be a doctor,
    and had a prostitute use pills to subdue the virgin Emma,
    who he wished to rape.
    23) Ripper victim Mary Jane Kelly and Walter’s prostitute
    lover Mary Davis, share the same name. Mary Davies (or
    Davis) was Mary Jane Kelly’s married name, under which she
    was buried. Both Mary’s were Irish. Both lived in
    single, ground floor rooms where they serviced clients,
    entered by long corridors. Both rooms were in the East End.
    Both Mary’s paid rent to a married couple who lived in the
    same building. Both were behind in their rent, one 25
    shillings, to other 29 shillings. Both were thought
    attractive enough to be able to have worked in the West End.
    Mary Davis refused to provide a child for sex to Walter.
    Walter then hears that she has “died”.
    24) Mary Jane Kelly was found murdered some reports said the
    door appeared to be locked and the key missing. Walter
    describes his tactics as a key stealer, taking keys to keep
    raped victims locked in.
    25) Walter links himself to a murdered
    women’s corpse found on the Thames in 1889, postulating
    she is Sarah Mavis, a prostitute who spurned him after
    extracting a large loan. He describes her identifying
    features as a star-shaped mark underneath her breast.
    The corpse found on the Thames had two ribs below the breast
    cut away, obliterating where Walter’s identifying mark
    would have been.
    26) Walter suffered “defloration mania”, the virgin breaking
    sex craze of the 19th century. In 1886, psychiatrist
    Krafft-Ebing linked defloration mania to a specific type of
    female mutilation murders that involve stabbing at the lower
    abdomen and removal of body parts: the marks of the
    Ripper.
    27) Walter feared being blackmailed by those
    who knew of his sex life. He had been subject to anonymous
    letters to his wife. He said he would kill a woman if his
    long term relationship was threatened.
    28) Walter suffers from “brain whirls” -
    memory lapse - during rage and extreme sex. These are
    symptoms of homicidal epilepsy, noted at the time as
    possible driver for the Ripper’s murders.
    29) Women out to expose the child sex trade in Whitechapel for
    targets for murder. A letter by Josephine Butler in 1885
    says Rebecca Jarrett, a prostitute living in the Hanbury
    Street who had revealed the child sex trade, was pursued by
    “four brutal brothel keepers” out to kill her.
    This specific motive for terror murder of Whitechapel
    prostitutes, recorded shortly before the Ripper killings, is
    ignored. The Attorney General orders Rebecca Jarrett herself
    prosecuted for buying a child as part of a newspaper expose
    on the child sex trade.
    30) Walter’s privately printed sex memoir My Secret Life is
    dated 1888, the year of the Ripper killings. He says it as a
    contribution to psychology for a sexual aberration he cannot
    understand. Walter speaks of 80 pages of diary entries -
    worse that the rapes, child abuse and sex crimes he includes
    - that are "consigned to the flames”.

    David Monaghan
    Author
    My Secret Life

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  • claire
    replied
    Hi Tom...true enough. I think it was just in the final couple of chapters of Secret Confession that things started to unravel a little for me, mainly due to a few mistakes or misreadings on the author's part. But, yep, at least it's not utterly mad. My personal prejudices about it all probably weigh in a bit on my reading, too, of course

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Constance Kent was clearly guilty, although it's possible she acted along with her brother. Regarding 'Secret Confession', I'm reserving complete judgement until I've finished the book, but I've been impressed so far. Monaghan referenced a report regarding the Tabram murder that I've scarcely seen mentioned by other researchers and that rather impressed me. Also, a good deal of My Secret Life is probably not fiction while some of it certainly is.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • claire
    replied
    Its being 'better' is a scant recommendation, surely. And as for the speculative bit of The Suspicions, well, even the author admits that it is a speculative book (given away by the title itself, in part). I'm far from being impossible to please; in fact, being of tiny mind, tiny things please me. But if warping the facts to suit is enough to link a fiction/memoir writer to a series of murders, then it's hard to see how any book can fail.

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    I'm not sure I would call 'The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher' speculative, unless you're impossible to please.

    As for Monaghan's book, I'm still early on in my reading (pg 75), but so far it's better than 90% of the suspect books that have ever been written on a non-contemporaneously alleged suspect.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • claire
    replied
    Hmmmm. Read this. Got marginally cross with anomalies like, Barnett left MJ on 30 October, 'Walter' used a prostitute exclusively for a week leaving her 25 Shillings in arrears with her rent [what, he didn't pay her at all?], Barnett had been gone for over a month.' Over a month at what point??? At the point three weeks after MJ was murdered? That's dodgy research and even dodgier subbing, imo.

    Yes, it might be interesting to some readers. But there is no more a case there (Mary Davis?? Not many of them in London at some point in the 1880s!!) than there would be if one were to suggest the Marquis de Sade acted out everything he wrote about. Or anyone else, for that matter. Honestly. Pick a fiction writer, and most of us have gone places in our work that we have never been in our lives. Lots of writers like shock value. Tenuous connections don't really wash much.

    However, I was interested in the psychologies, or psychosexual proclivities, of men at the time. Puts a nice bit of detail onto things. And I agree with the author that there may have been but few men who had similar psychological make-ups, although this doesn't necessarily pertain. But does it solve the JtR crimes? Nup. Sorry. Nice cover, though. Reminded me, as it was surely intended, of the Suspicions of Mr. Whicher cover. Unfortunately is even more speculative than that book.

    Leave a comment:


  • ChrisGeorge
    replied
    Originally posted by spryder View Post
    As someone who has collected both US presidential biographies and Jack the Ripper non-fiction, I can confirm that is absolutely not true - not even close! I barely scratched the surface on presidential biographies by the time I had to give it up, for sheer lack of storage space. The whole of Jack the Ripper non-fiction takes up about one good-sized wall. The full gamut of presidential biographies would fill an entire house several times over.
    Hi Spry

    I assume you are including JFK assassination books which I am sure take up quite a number of good size walls.

    All the best

    Chris

    Leave a comment:


  • spryder
    replied
    Originally posted by Pinkerton View Post
    According to the television program "The Most" on the History Channel more books have been written about Jack the Ripper than ALL of the President's of the United States COMBINED! At first I doubted this statistic, but after thinking about it for awhile I think it is absolutely true...
    As someone who has collected both US presidential biographies and Jack the Ripper non-fiction, I can confirm that is absolutely not true - not even close! I barely scratched the surface on presidential biographies by the time I had to give it up, for sheer lack of storage space. The whole of Jack the Ripper non-fiction takes up about one good-sized wall. The full gamut of presidential biographies would fill an entire house several times over.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Grave Maurice
    replied
    Originally posted by Pinkerton View Post
    ...more books have been written about Jack the Ripper than ALL of the President's of the United States COMBINED!
    Yeah, Tom's right. Several hundred books have been written about Lincoln alone. The History Channel made a mistake.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Hi Pink,

    I've heard that too, but considering over 200 books have been written about the JFK assassination, I'd say that doesn't add up. As for suspect books, they only become annoying after you've studied the case for quite a while. In the beginning, they're fun, they ARE the discovery. Once you know the basics of the case, you're not satisfied with them and want to make your own discoveries. That's where we are at, but having said that, suspect books could and SHOULD be viable for all audiences, especially battle-worn Ripperologists. Like Evans and Gainey's book, it contained a lot of new information that Ripperphiles could sink their teeth into whether or not they bought Tumblety as the Ripper. Having a plausible suspect doesn't hurt either.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • Pinkerton
    replied
    The "MOST"

    I'm also with Stewart Evans on this one. Too many books on the Ripper, and very few of value. According to the television program "The Most" on the History Channel more books have been written about Jack the Ripper than ALL of the President's of the United States COMBINED! At first I doubted this statistic, but after thinking about it for awhile I think it is absolutely true...

    No wonder there is so much schlock out there!

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    If I had written a book five years ago, it would be on an altogether less flattering list now. I'm writing a book now because I have to, not because I merely want to. That's how I think it should be.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Magpie
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    I should learn to keep my mouth shut.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott
    Take it as a compliment. Your books' been on my "most anticipated" list for around half a decade now.

    Leave a comment:

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