So...
As fascinating as I find the history of Jack the Ripper, and now and again I am pleasantly surprised by fiction about the case, some of those I have read (and by no means all) have left me with something of a bitter taste in my mouth.
Please don't misunderstand that: I love From Hell, and Anno Dracula, and there are few takes on the case I would recommend to a Sherlock Holmes fan who wants something other than the Canon to read...
But those that miss the mark end up feeling disrespectful, if that makes sense. Not through any intentional slander, or the likes, but because with any fiction inspired by history, you struggle to do justice to events and people, or it may end up feeling tawdry.
For full disclosure, some of you may remember I posted in the creative writing section ages ago, and my attempts at approaching the fringes of the subject (never intending my story to offer a solution to the case) was TERRIBLE.
More than once since, I have tried to write stories set within the Autumn of Terror and I have always found myself writing about fictional killers haunting the streets to avoid the risk of feeling as though I was going to trample over people who deserve better. I fully acknowledge that better writers than me (some of whom I believe have been, or are, users of this forum, because, really, who would write about something even remotely Ripperish without reading some of the threads here?) have been able to reach the balance I am for and miss, if anything highlighting areas of the case many people might not have considered before.
But all of this got me thinking, how many of the others with an interest lean to, or away from, the genre.
To clarify: I mean intentional works of fiction as art, not hoaxes, or those who make somewhat imaginative leaps in their theories.
As fascinating as I find the history of Jack the Ripper, and now and again I am pleasantly surprised by fiction about the case, some of those I have read (and by no means all) have left me with something of a bitter taste in my mouth.
Please don't misunderstand that: I love From Hell, and Anno Dracula, and there are few takes on the case I would recommend to a Sherlock Holmes fan who wants something other than the Canon to read...
But those that miss the mark end up feeling disrespectful, if that makes sense. Not through any intentional slander, or the likes, but because with any fiction inspired by history, you struggle to do justice to events and people, or it may end up feeling tawdry.
For full disclosure, some of you may remember I posted in the creative writing section ages ago, and my attempts at approaching the fringes of the subject (never intending my story to offer a solution to the case) was TERRIBLE.
More than once since, I have tried to write stories set within the Autumn of Terror and I have always found myself writing about fictional killers haunting the streets to avoid the risk of feeling as though I was going to trample over people who deserve better. I fully acknowledge that better writers than me (some of whom I believe have been, or are, users of this forum, because, really, who would write about something even remotely Ripperish without reading some of the threads here?) have been able to reach the balance I am for and miss, if anything highlighting areas of the case many people might not have considered before.
But all of this got me thinking, how many of the others with an interest lean to, or away from, the genre.
To clarify: I mean intentional works of fiction as art, not hoaxes, or those who make somewhat imaginative leaps in their theories.
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