Hi,
Like a lot of people here, I have literally thousands of books about true crime. I prefer real books to e-books.
I have now run out of good reads.
If I do a run down of my preferences perhaps somebody can help me find some murders that I don't already have in my collection.
I would prefer Victorian era or onwards, but I'm open to any good read.
Unsolved crimes are okay because I quite enjoy the whodunnit element.
I'm sorry to say that I don't really want any more Jack the Ripper books in my collection.
Anything along the lines of the Julia Wallace murder is the kind of thing that I am looking for.
If anyone else enjoys these type of whodunnit true murder mysteries then I can recommend a few to them.....my personal favourites:
The Dominici Affair by Jean LaBorde. I've lost count of the times I've read this gripping story. A very British family were murdered whilst on holiday in France in 1952.
The Riddle of Birdhurst Rise by Richard Whittington-Egan. Victorian genteel society in leafy Croydon was shocked by these murders, all victims in the same family. The poisoner is obvious (imo) but this person gets away with killing three people, maybe more? I've also read this one a lot of times. Gripping stuff!
Like a lot of people here, I have literally thousands of books about true crime. I prefer real books to e-books.
I have now run out of good reads.
If I do a run down of my preferences perhaps somebody can help me find some murders that I don't already have in my collection.
I would prefer Victorian era or onwards, but I'm open to any good read.
Unsolved crimes are okay because I quite enjoy the whodunnit element.
I'm sorry to say that I don't really want any more Jack the Ripper books in my collection.
Anything along the lines of the Julia Wallace murder is the kind of thing that I am looking for.
If anyone else enjoys these type of whodunnit true murder mysteries then I can recommend a few to them.....my personal favourites:
The Dominici Affair by Jean LaBorde. I've lost count of the times I've read this gripping story. A very British family were murdered whilst on holiday in France in 1952.
The Riddle of Birdhurst Rise by Richard Whittington-Egan. Victorian genteel society in leafy Croydon was shocked by these murders, all victims in the same family. The poisoner is obvious (imo) but this person gets away with killing three people, maybe more? I've also read this one a lot of times. Gripping stuff!
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