The author points out from the start of our fascination with true crime. Broadsheets covering sensational murders were sold for a penny back in the seventeenth century. In our current century, if it bleeds it leads still is the rule of the day.
During the bombings of London, the stress resulted in several murder-suicides and also provided cover for numerous homicides. In one case, a man named Harry Dobkin lived with his wife Rachel on and off for a period of twenty years. They lived in the predominantly Jewish East End of London and were brought together via an arranged marriage. Rachel vanished and her body was discovered one year later. Although surrounded by bombed out ruins, a coroner ruled her death to be caused by strangulation. Harry was convicted and hanged.
Soho was a notorious section of London run by opposing gangs. Harry Distleman ran the Yiddishers, a Jewish gang and he battled Tony Mancini and his Italian crew. They ruled over black-market stock, gambling and prostitution. Canadian, and later American soldiers made for expanding profits. Tony stabbed Harry to death in a bar brawl.
The "Blackout Ripper, " Gordon Cummins killed four women and a gas mask linked him to one of the murders. Some of the victims were prostitutes and they had doubled in numbers in the war years. American soldiers were particularly vicious with gang rapes and other sexual assaults being covered up by the self-policing U. S. military.
Britain recruited men an women from Jamaica during the war but it did not lessen the overt racism of the time. Aloysius Abbott was a volunteer of the RAF who, while having dinner, was shot and killed by a white man, Fred Westbrook who was convicted of manslaughter. It only worsened with the Notting Hill riots twelve years later in 1958.
The final chapter recounts the "10 Rillington Place" murders by Reginald Christie. A possibly innocent man, Timothy Evans was hanged first, only to be followed up by the serial killer Christie.
Ms. Bell has done exhaustive research of the war period and I highly recommend this book.