Okay so just before i head off to enjoy the gym I will read this bit in Wilkes' book, which is after Radio City aired. It reads:
There is more but the index sucks, so I can't find it.
Hector Munro says his memory is feeble and he doesn't recall it, but Goodman personally speaks here and gives an account of what he had earlier been told. Again I would have to find this but I'm late for the gym and this index is doing me in.
Lily did tell police 8.30 to 9, her mother 9 to 9.15. Her mother seemed to get the time earlier than probable for the Monday night alibi if that's of any help (she said something like 7.15 when it was 7.35 or something to that effect).
I owned this book for a long time but could never bring myself to read it because I know a lot of it has since been shown wrong (e.g. that he had no alibi) and thus it annoys me to read. Like how Parry is portrayed like a pantomine villain in The Man from the Pru. But like Murphy's also very biased book (which I find equally annoying to read), it has some very important information in it. In both. Wilkes has good info on the police lineups etc.
"In January 1931 I was going out with Gordon Parry, but we were not engaged. I gave a statement to the police investigating the Wallace murder, but it was only partly true. This was because I only saw Gordon later on the night of the crime. I can't remember how much later.
I have made that part of my life a closed book. To reopen it now would cause me terrible distress.
I was very, very much in love with Gordon and he with me. He was a verycharming, handsome and talented young man, and I was terribly upset when the relationship ended.
There were only ever two men in my life, Gordon, my young love, and my husband, with whom love blossomed.
I knew Gordon had died last April, and that his wife had died some years ago.
To remember all this fifty years on causes me great pain. But I will say this: I can't possibly believe that Gordon did this murder, and he certainly never confided in me anything that suggested he might have done.
The episode is closed, and it belongs to me alone."
I have made that part of my life a closed book. To reopen it now would cause me terrible distress.
I was very, very much in love with Gordon and he with me. He was a verycharming, handsome and talented young man, and I was terribly upset when the relationship ended.
There were only ever two men in my life, Gordon, my young love, and my husband, with whom love blossomed.
I knew Gordon had died last April, and that his wife had died some years ago.
To remember all this fifty years on causes me great pain. But I will say this: I can't possibly believe that Gordon did this murder, and he certainly never confided in me anything that suggested he might have done.
The episode is closed, and it belongs to me alone."
Hector Munro says his memory is feeble and he doesn't recall it, but Goodman personally speaks here and gives an account of what he had earlier been told. Again I would have to find this but I'm late for the gym and this index is doing me in.
Lily did tell police 8.30 to 9, her mother 9 to 9.15. Her mother seemed to get the time earlier than probable for the Monday night alibi if that's of any help (she said something like 7.15 when it was 7.35 or something to that effect).
I owned this book for a long time but could never bring myself to read it because I know a lot of it has since been shown wrong (e.g. that he had no alibi) and thus it annoys me to read. Like how Parry is portrayed like a pantomine villain in The Man from the Pru. But like Murphy's also very biased book (which I find equally annoying to read), it has some very important information in it. In both. Wilkes has good info on the police lineups etc.
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