Gambits
Rob Clack has kindly read and responded to my recent book, Jack the Ripper and Black Magic: Victorian Conspiracy Theories, Secret Societies and the Supernatural Mystique of the Whitechapel Murders. He has made it clear it is not quite his cup of tea. Fair enough, books should encourage discussion for open minded readers.
Now as he has noted his impressions on JTR Forums, a site where I cannot respond to an author’s gambit, a brief reply is perhaps required here.
Rob begins his thin and dismissive summing up and verdict with a positive tone on the cover art, introduction and “…some interesting snippets of information”.
However, his main beef with the contents of the book is focused on the monetary considerations that go into production of a non-fiction book, for which as he knows with experience, is not in any way determined by an author researching and writing with a reputable publisher.
The publisher, McFarland, has an impressive list of reliable and noted Jack the Ripper titles generally priced equally for the library market. For instance, definitive titles such as The News from Whitechapel: Jack the Ripper in The Daily Telegraph by Alexander Chisholm, Christopher-Michael DiGrazia and Dave Yost with a foreword by Paul Begg. The Jack the Ripper Suspects: Persons Cited by Investigators and Theorists by Stan Russo, foreword by Christopher-Michael DiGrazia. Prince of Quacks: The Notorious Life of Dr. Francis Tumblety, Charlatan and Jack the Ripper Suspect by Timothy B. Riordan. And, Elizabeth Stride and Jack the Ripper: The Life and Death of the Reputed Third Victim by Dave Yost; though I heard no objections when these titles were released.
Rob Clack gives sage “advice” to “Don’t waste your money”, presumably because the book, “…contains nothing to justify the high price tag”. If that is the only objection to my book that justifies such jealous and opportunistic remarks from competitive authors in the world of Jack the Ripper studies, then I am satisfied the contents has given rise to impartial readers for whom the book was written to provide educational material on neglected aspects of the Whitechapel murders in their Victorian context.
So perhaps now we are in a better position to understand Rob’s preemptive attacks upon what is, after all, only a book.
While enjoying a, “Great introduction”, in Rob’s informed opinion it’s all, “Downhill after that”. Presumably, Rob didn’t enjoy the ride through the remaining narrative towards the concluding chapter titled, “Whitechapel Secret Service”. It’s obviously not his cup of tea to have the fullest examination known of the Metropolitan Police Special Branch inquiries on Jack the Ripper. I would have thought that he, of all people would have had something of more interest to say on the details presented.
I do understand that this is a touchy subject for traditional and determined researchers to consider objectively and impartially given the strained Irish/Anglo relations of the past, particularly in reference to the character and statements of Sir Robert Anderson on the politics of the police investigation of Jack the Ripper in the East End.
However, I do thank Mr. Clack for reading and for his consideration of my book, the contents for which I am entirely responsible as the author, and can assure those in doubt, that it is the subject matter on the Whitechapel murders that is of prime interest and a source of historical concern.
Quite simply, the book seeks to make a contribution, as the publisher McFarland recognized, to the clarification for general readers of over a century of Jack the Ripper legends and partial historical surmise.
Spiro
Rob Clack has kindly read and responded to my recent book, Jack the Ripper and Black Magic: Victorian Conspiracy Theories, Secret Societies and the Supernatural Mystique of the Whitechapel Murders. He has made it clear it is not quite his cup of tea. Fair enough, books should encourage discussion for open minded readers.
Now as he has noted his impressions on JTR Forums, a site where I cannot respond to an author’s gambit, a brief reply is perhaps required here.
Rob begins his thin and dismissive summing up and verdict with a positive tone on the cover art, introduction and “…some interesting snippets of information”.
However, his main beef with the contents of the book is focused on the monetary considerations that go into production of a non-fiction book, for which as he knows with experience, is not in any way determined by an author researching and writing with a reputable publisher.
The publisher, McFarland, has an impressive list of reliable and noted Jack the Ripper titles generally priced equally for the library market. For instance, definitive titles such as The News from Whitechapel: Jack the Ripper in The Daily Telegraph by Alexander Chisholm, Christopher-Michael DiGrazia and Dave Yost with a foreword by Paul Begg. The Jack the Ripper Suspects: Persons Cited by Investigators and Theorists by Stan Russo, foreword by Christopher-Michael DiGrazia. Prince of Quacks: The Notorious Life of Dr. Francis Tumblety, Charlatan and Jack the Ripper Suspect by Timothy B. Riordan. And, Elizabeth Stride and Jack the Ripper: The Life and Death of the Reputed Third Victim by Dave Yost; though I heard no objections when these titles were released.
Rob Clack gives sage “advice” to “Don’t waste your money”, presumably because the book, “…contains nothing to justify the high price tag”. If that is the only objection to my book that justifies such jealous and opportunistic remarks from competitive authors in the world of Jack the Ripper studies, then I am satisfied the contents has given rise to impartial readers for whom the book was written to provide educational material on neglected aspects of the Whitechapel murders in their Victorian context.
So perhaps now we are in a better position to understand Rob’s preemptive attacks upon what is, after all, only a book.
While enjoying a, “Great introduction”, in Rob’s informed opinion it’s all, “Downhill after that”. Presumably, Rob didn’t enjoy the ride through the remaining narrative towards the concluding chapter titled, “Whitechapel Secret Service”. It’s obviously not his cup of tea to have the fullest examination known of the Metropolitan Police Special Branch inquiries on Jack the Ripper. I would have thought that he, of all people would have had something of more interest to say on the details presented.
I do understand that this is a touchy subject for traditional and determined researchers to consider objectively and impartially given the strained Irish/Anglo relations of the past, particularly in reference to the character and statements of Sir Robert Anderson on the politics of the police investigation of Jack the Ripper in the East End.
However, I do thank Mr. Clack for reading and for his consideration of my book, the contents for which I am entirely responsible as the author, and can assure those in doubt, that it is the subject matter on the Whitechapel murders that is of prime interest and a source of historical concern.
Quite simply, the book seeks to make a contribution, as the publisher McFarland recognized, to the clarification for general readers of over a century of Jack the Ripper legends and partial historical surmise.
Spiro
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