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A Book of Remarkable Criminals

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This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

177 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1918

493 people are currently reading
800 people want to read

About the author

Harry Brodribb Irving

18 books7 followers
Harry Brodribb Irving (5 August 1870 – 17 October 1919), was a British stage actor and actor-manager; the eldest son of Sir Henry Irving and his wife Florence (née O'Callaghan), and father of designer Laurence Irving and actress Elizabeth Irving.

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5 stars
85 (17%)
4 stars
124 (25%)
3 stars
149 (31%)
2 stars
93 (19%)
1 star
26 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews
Profile Image for Shelly.
716 reviews17 followers
October 27, 2017
People haven't changed since the beginning of time. Same motives, money or love, still at the forefront of malicious violence. Good writing, taking court reports and news accounts and making coherent tales of treachery and malice. The introduction was informative and good reading as well!
On a side note after reading this, I feel like we have become a lazy and illiterate society, no longer using expansive vocabulary, dumbing down our thought patterns and expressions to the least common denominator. Such a pity! When's the last time you read a book that used the word, 'compunctious' ?
Profile Image for Rajiv Chopra.
722 reviews18 followers
January 18, 2014
This is an excellent book, and very well researched. I like it because it covers the life and crimes of criminals who were all, in a way, small criminals, but each remarkable in his or her own way.

They were not all remarkable as criminals, but their life stories are remarkable, and some of them really were remarkable in the manner they turned to crime.

The book is well-written and easy to read. I found the stories to be fascinating. Many years back, I read a book on the deadliest murderers of the twentieth century. These are stories of criminals who lived in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and their stories are well-worth reading.
Profile Image for Courtney Dixon.
169 reviews2 followers
December 12, 2020
Just ok.

Wasn't really my taste. I found it somewhat dry and boring to get through. It's well written, I was hoping for a little more wow factor.
Profile Image for Graham.
1,574 reviews61 followers
July 6, 2023
An early true-crime collection of real-life murder stories taking place in the second half of the 19th century. The author's style, which is occasionally long-winded, comes across as a little dated in places but otherwise he's surprisingly readable, which is mainly thanks to his enthusiasm for the subject matter. Some of the cases he retells are famous - think Charles Peace, H.H. Holmes - while others are far more obscure, and in the last third of the book he develops a real passion for small-time stories of murders in France. Mistresses and lovers conspiring to kill husbands, business associates butchering one another over money matters, that kind of thing. Although the subject matter is undeniably grim, given the era the author refuses to dwell on the bloodshed but instead offers up commentary on the character of those responsible. It's an intriguing little read.
Profile Image for Patricia Farmer.
168 reviews3 followers
November 9, 2020
An adventure back in time

The author's style of writing, with these stories, takes the reader back centuries, and definitely puts you right there with the characters. Definitely a good read.
Profile Image for Connie.
498 reviews11 followers
June 19, 2023
Written over one hundred years ago. Shows atrocious murders are not a new problem. discusses H. H. Holmes. Also quite a few from Europe. Reading dragged a little due to the era it was written but mostly intersting.
17 reviews1 follower
April 19, 2024
It was just OK. Nothing really stood out as being particularly “remarkable” about any of the criminals. It was a let down from that perspectives. I was expecting some criminal masterminds. I don’t think any of the characters fit in the category of a mastermind.
Profile Image for Miss Cat.
100 reviews
January 1, 2019
So so

This book was pretty interesting, but very dry. I love all of the old words that I got to learn.
Profile Image for Sherry.
121 reviews6 followers
February 18, 2021
Intriguing, but, for Mr, hard to follow

The style of writing is different than Whatcom used to.
Somewhat interesting stories but I just couldn't "get into" them. Sorry
1,535 reviews8 followers
December 6, 2024
A description of some crimes and the events surrounding them in the 19th century.
Profile Image for Tom.
241 reviews7 followers
August 9, 2019
“A Book of Remarkable Criminals” by Henry B. Irving

A study of true crime stories of serial killers, burgles and murderers in 19th century England, New Zealand, and France are profiled in this book originally published in 1918. Also is the story of H.H. Homes, retold in Eric Larson’s “The Devil in the White City”
Profile Image for Paul Trembling.
Author 25 books19 followers
January 27, 2016
Not for everybody, but if you have an interest in criminology and in history, you may well find it fascinating, as I did! Not only do you find out once notorious but now almost forgotten villains, but you also get insights into the times and cultures they lived in - not so far from ours in time, but already so different in many ways.
Profile Image for Two Readers in Love.
585 reviews20 followers
Want to read
March 3, 2021
"This classic study profiles serial killers, gentleman murderers, and every stripe of madman in between, including the case of H.H. Holmes, famously recounted in Erik Larson’s award–winning bestseller, The Devil in the White City." - Early Bird Books

Available for free in the public domain an eBook thanks to the volunteers at Project Gutenberg: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/446
Profile Image for Tazar Oo.
141 reviews28 followers
August 2, 2011
Online က ေဒါင္းလုတ္ရတဲ့အတြက္ ၀မ္းသာပါတယ္။ ဖတ္ခ်င္သူေတြဆီ ပို႔ေပးလို႔ရတယ္...။ ရာဇ၀တ္မႈမ်ားအေၾကာင္း။ က်ဴးလြန္သူ တရားခံေတြရဲ႕ စိတၱဇျဖစ္စဥ္၊ ခံစားမႈ...၊ က်ဴးလြန္ပံု.. စတာေတြကို အေသးစိတ္ေလ့လာျခင္း။ ကမၻာေက်ာ္ မႈခင္းေတြနဲ႔ တူပါတယ္...။ စိတ္ကူးယဥ္ဇာတ္လမ္းေတြထက္စာရင္ ပိုဆြဲေဆာင္မႈရွိမယ္ထင္တယ္..။
Profile Image for Rabid Readers Reviews.
546 reviews25 followers
August 3, 2011
I got this book as a freebie with the .mobi reader on my Blackberry. I'm a fan of true crime and had not read about any of the very interesting cases (between 1850 and 1910) before. I very much enjoyed the telling and the old fashioned morality tone and speculation of the work.
Profile Image for Ams78.
29 reviews
April 17, 2013
This was a very interesting book of murders committed in the late 19th century. I found it to be quite fascinating, though some passages were a bit hard to understand. There were several discussions of court proceedings as well, which were intriguing. All things considered, a very good read.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
21 reviews
July 15, 2013
All i wanted to say was it would be an idea to take a breath and use a few full stops. Couldnt carry on is I was alwaus loosing interest.
4 reviews
May 29, 2015
Good book. Simple language easy to understand. The author grasps attention of the readers in each case, though i found most of the cases to be from france(paris).
40 reviews
June 13, 2015
Interesting

Definitely a very unique book. Some very interesting stories that are really different, strange and many border on the bizarre.
Profile Image for Bob.
1 review1 follower
May 20, 2016
Dry

The stories were interesting but the writing was a bit stuffy for my taste. Obviously British. It was a free download, and worth every penny
Profile Image for Eric.
722 reviews6 followers
February 6, 2017
This was like watching a series of Forensic Files episodes taking place in the 19th century. I wouldn't call many of these criminals remarkable but the cases were entertaining.
271 reviews1 follower
April 15, 2017
I am usually the person who won't give up on a book ... I have to read it to the end. It once took me four years; the book was over 700 pages long, but four years .... In this case, however, I had to make an exception. While the author must have done quite a bit of research, the criminals described were somewhat 'unremarkable.' There wasn't anything t0 pique my interest -- nothing exciting to encourage me to continue reading. The other problem I had was the number of typos or grammatical errors. I believe this book will appeal to a specific audience, but it wasn't for me.
Displaying 1 - 26 of 26 reviews

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