Since the Casebook server crash erased this thread last time it was here, I'm combining several posts about Ripper Notes #28 into one long one.
Let's start with a view of the front and back cover:
Ripper Notes: The Legend Continues looks at the enduring mystery of the Jack the Ripper murders... including both the myths from the past that still survive today as well as the way modern enthusiasts keep the case alive.
•"Carl Ferdinand Feigenbaum: An Old Suspect Resurfaces": The idea that Jack the Ripper was killing women all around the world is an old one, but it's also one presented in some modern authors' books. Ripper Notes Editor Wolf Vanderlinden presents the full details on Carl Feigenbaum, a convicted murderer whose own lawyer thought he was Jack the Ripper, as well as the deaths of women in the United States and Europe that he was later accused of being responsible. The article includes not one but two contemporary illustrations of Feigenbaum never before seen in any modern publication as well as a rare photo of Lottie Morgan, a prostitute in northern Wisconsin whose gory murder made headlines across the country at the time but has since been largely forgotten.
•"The Myth of Jack the Ripper": Going along with our theme, John Bennett talks about top hats, black bags and the other aspects of the legend that continues on to this day.
•"Heartless: The Evidence for a Copycat Killer": The idea the Mary Kelly's killer may not have been responsible for any of the previous victims has gained a fair number of supporters in recent years. Ripper Notes Executive Editor Dan Norder takes a hard look at what may be the most compelling argument in favor of that position... and in the process discovers strong evidence that the Whitechapel murderer changed his methods to live up to his own legend.
•"Romanticizing Mary Jane Kelly": Craig Hansen explores the peculiar ways this most mysterious of the Whitechapel victims has been treated over the years.
•"Rail Service Between Blackheath and London in 1888: Does it Place Druitt Near the East End?": Andrew Spallek sets out to answer that very question and, in the process, looks into other aspects of the life of Chief Constable Melville Macnaghten's favorite suspect.
•"The Thomas Street Murder: The Return of the Ripper?": Bernard Brown looks at an 1894 killing and its connections to the earlier crimes in London's East End.
•"‘Another World and Another Judge’ - Do New Scientific Tests Clear Crippen?": Jonathan Menges dissects recent claims that DNA has proven this famous murderer to be innocent.
Plus:
•Full reports on a number of Ripper-related events.
•"The Vintage Art Vault" returns and spots Jack the Ripper at a Rhode Island pawn shop, of all places.
•Our reviewers tell you what you need to know about seven recent Ripper titles.
•Author Martin Fido posts a message to "The Whitechapel Letterbox."
In other news, I'm pleased to announce that both Wolf Vanderlinden and Alan Sharp have been promoted to full fledged Ripper Notes editors. I will still be an editor and also the publisher, but it was rapidly becoming apparent that both of them were doing far more work than would fall under an Associate Editor title. Related to that, Alan will be taking over the European and rest of world (i.e. non-American) mailings and subscriptions. If you are in that part of the world and pay online through our website at www.RipperNotes.com you should continue to do so, but if you mail your money in you should note the new address:
Alan Sharp, Ripper Notes editor, 62/4 Spottiswoode Street, Edinburgh, EH9 1DH, Scotland
My sincere thanks go to Debra Arif for having handled the mailings over there for the last couple of issues.
And I have to check a couple of things on the Canadian side regarding shipping costs, but Wolf Vanderlinden will probably be mailing out issues to subscribers in that country.
Once again I am honored that our subscribers have placed so much trust in me and have been understanding with the various problems causing delays in getting issues to print. If I ever wondered just how much support and good will we have earned over the years something like this sure demonstrates it.
Those of you who aren't subscribers can either go to our website and sign up, wait until this issue hits online bookstores like Amazon or Barnes & Noble, or contact me direct for single issue purchases. Those looking for sample articles from old issues can check out our web site or click the appropriate cover image on the Casebook index of Ripper Notes back issues. And don't forget the new Ripper Notes Extra, which is updated regularly with free Ripper-related content.
Let's start with a view of the front and back cover:
[ATTACH]266[/ATTACH]
Ripper Notes #28 -- ISBN: 0-9789112-2-9
Cover art (clockwise from upper right): Detail of the 'Dear Fraser' letter;
color photo of 29 Hanbury Street, from The London of Jack the Ripper:
Then and Now by Robert Clack and Philip Hutchinson, courtesy Philip
Hutchinson/Margaret Whitby-Green; presentation from the 2007 Ripper
conference; slide with evidence from the Dr. Crippen case
Ripper Notes #28 -- ISBN: 0-9789112-2-9
Cover art (clockwise from upper right): Detail of the 'Dear Fraser' letter;
color photo of 29 Hanbury Street, from The London of Jack the Ripper:
Then and Now by Robert Clack and Philip Hutchinson, courtesy Philip
Hutchinson/Margaret Whitby-Green; presentation from the 2007 Ripper
conference; slide with evidence from the Dr. Crippen case
Ripper Notes: The Legend Continues looks at the enduring mystery of the Jack the Ripper murders... including both the myths from the past that still survive today as well as the way modern enthusiasts keep the case alive.
•"Carl Ferdinand Feigenbaum: An Old Suspect Resurfaces": The idea that Jack the Ripper was killing women all around the world is an old one, but it's also one presented in some modern authors' books. Ripper Notes Editor Wolf Vanderlinden presents the full details on Carl Feigenbaum, a convicted murderer whose own lawyer thought he was Jack the Ripper, as well as the deaths of women in the United States and Europe that he was later accused of being responsible. The article includes not one but two contemporary illustrations of Feigenbaum never before seen in any modern publication as well as a rare photo of Lottie Morgan, a prostitute in northern Wisconsin whose gory murder made headlines across the country at the time but has since been largely forgotten.
[ATTACH]267[/ATTACH]
Sneak peak at some pages from Wolf Vanderlinden's article
Sneak peak at some pages from Wolf Vanderlinden's article
•"The Myth of Jack the Ripper": Going along with our theme, John Bennett talks about top hats, black bags and the other aspects of the legend that continues on to this day.
•"Heartless: The Evidence for a Copycat Killer": The idea the Mary Kelly's killer may not have been responsible for any of the previous victims has gained a fair number of supporters in recent years. Ripper Notes Executive Editor Dan Norder takes a hard look at what may be the most compelling argument in favor of that position... and in the process discovers strong evidence that the Whitechapel murderer changed his methods to live up to his own legend.
•"Romanticizing Mary Jane Kelly": Craig Hansen explores the peculiar ways this most mysterious of the Whitechapel victims has been treated over the years.
•"Rail Service Between Blackheath and London in 1888: Does it Place Druitt Near the East End?": Andrew Spallek sets out to answer that very question and, in the process, looks into other aspects of the life of Chief Constable Melville Macnaghten's favorite suspect.
•"The Thomas Street Murder: The Return of the Ripper?": Bernard Brown looks at an 1894 killing and its connections to the earlier crimes in London's East End.
•"‘Another World and Another Judge’ - Do New Scientific Tests Clear Crippen?": Jonathan Menges dissects recent claims that DNA has proven this famous murderer to be innocent.
Plus:
•Full reports on a number of Ripper-related events.
•"The Vintage Art Vault" returns and spots Jack the Ripper at a Rhode Island pawn shop, of all places.
•Our reviewers tell you what you need to know about seven recent Ripper titles.
•Author Martin Fido posts a message to "The Whitechapel Letterbox."
In other news, I'm pleased to announce that both Wolf Vanderlinden and Alan Sharp have been promoted to full fledged Ripper Notes editors. I will still be an editor and also the publisher, but it was rapidly becoming apparent that both of them were doing far more work than would fall under an Associate Editor title. Related to that, Alan will be taking over the European and rest of world (i.e. non-American) mailings and subscriptions. If you are in that part of the world and pay online through our website at www.RipperNotes.com you should continue to do so, but if you mail your money in you should note the new address:
Alan Sharp, Ripper Notes editor, 62/4 Spottiswoode Street, Edinburgh, EH9 1DH, Scotland
My sincere thanks go to Debra Arif for having handled the mailings over there for the last couple of issues.
And I have to check a couple of things on the Canadian side regarding shipping costs, but Wolf Vanderlinden will probably be mailing out issues to subscribers in that country.
Once again I am honored that our subscribers have placed so much trust in me and have been understanding with the various problems causing delays in getting issues to print. If I ever wondered just how much support and good will we have earned over the years something like this sure demonstrates it.
Those of you who aren't subscribers can either go to our website and sign up, wait until this issue hits online bookstores like Amazon or Barnes & Noble, or contact me direct for single issue purchases. Those looking for sample articles from old issues can check out our web site or click the appropriate cover image on the Casebook index of Ripper Notes back issues. And don't forget the new Ripper Notes Extra, which is updated regularly with free Ripper-related content.
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