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News Flash!! . . . VINCENT VAN GOGH WAS JACK THE RIPPER!!
From 5th to 8th September 1888 Vincent Van Gogh was painting "The Night Café in the Place Lamartine in Arles", and on 9th September 1888 he was writing a letter to his brother from Arles. How exactly did he kill Annie Chapman in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields, Dale? Just to help you work it out, the journey is 741.8 miles each way and the round trip, by car, on modern roads would take 25 hours & 12 minutes (plus the killing time obviously).
I presume you've explained, in your book, how this is possible.
Regards, Bridewell.
I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.
From 5th to 8th September 1888 Vincent Van Gogh was painting "The Night Café in the Place Lamartine in Arles", and on 9th September 1888 he was writing a letter to his brother from Arles. How exactly did he kill Annie Chapman in the back yard of 29 Hanbury Street, Spitalfields, Dale? Just to help you work it out, the journey is 741.8 miles each way and the round trip, by car, on modern roads would take 25 hours & 12 minutes (plus the killing time obviously).
His friend Sickert, of course did it. Soon the competition
got more heated.
I presume Mr Larner will claim that all these dates are 'merely' scholarly suppositions, guesswork - and he knows the dates must be wrong, because he has briefly scanned the source material on Vincent with an eye to cherry-picking items which might support his theory, and he can confirm that... if his theory is correct then... the dates must be wrong.
I'm sorry if it's presumptuous of me to answer on Mr Larner's behalf, it's just that he seems awfully quiet these days.
Mr Larner is here to promote his book. That he is seeking publicity is evident from the sensationalist title of the thread; that he is receiving that publicity is evident from the number of views this thread has so far received - in excess of 13,000.
Jolly well done Mr Larner.
Personally, I don't see the public falling for this one - VVG is simply too famous for it to work. He's not mysterious enough. Any decent publisher would decline such a tale on the basis of an assured loss, if for no other reason.
Bridewell, I'm sure you're right. It's all explained in the book.
Just buy the book. Buy the book and all will be explained. And if it's not, well, at least you bought the book.
Just buy the book!
My question for Mr Larner: on your website it says,
HE'S DONE IT!!!
HE'S SOLVED THE CASE!!!
AND IN A BIG WAY!!!
I'm just wondering - who wrote those words? I have a suspicion that's Dale Larner, talking about Dale Larner. Which would be either hilarious, or extremely sad, depending on the reader's cynicism levels.
Also, how can a case be solved in a big way? Surely it's either solved or unsolved? That's rather like being slightly pregnant, or very unique. Unless you meant to infer that you had 'solved' the case in a really commercially viable way...?
Call me paranoid if you like, (it sounds better than my real name anyway), but could Mr Larner's Vincent book be a huge bluff...He throws a lighted fuse into the Powder Keg (this site) and records the resultant explosion for posterity... or a newspaper article...how to pull the wool over some nutty old bunch of Jack the Ripper freaks...now that just might be something that'd make him money!
Call me paranoid if you like, (it sounds better than my real name anyway), but could Mr Larner's Vincent book be a huge bluff...He throws a lighted fuse into the Powder Keg (this site) and records the resultant explosion for posterity... or a newspaper article...how to pull the wool over some nutty old bunch of Jack the Ripper freaks...now that just might be something that'd make him money!
Just a passing thought...
Dave
Afternoon, Paranoid (well, you asked for it )
Good theory - however, Mr Larner's interest in VVG is apparently real:
Whichever you choose "Van Go" doesn't enter into it (as John Cleese might've put it).
Van Go? Sounds like a Furniture Removal company - For all your relocation needs, call Van Go today!
But I digress
It would surpise me very much if Mr Larner had a shred of hard evidence in support of his contention; and that being said, I think enough board space has been wasted on publicising his book already.
Vincent Van Gogh was certainly in France on 8th September 1888, when the murder of Annie Eliza Chapman was committed in Spitalfields. He was almost certainly in France throughout the Autumn of Terror. He was not Jack the Ripper.
Regards, Bridewell.
I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.
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