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Autobiografija Džeka Trboseka

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Ovi memoari otkriveni su tek nedavno i čini se da ih je dvadesetih godina prošlog veka napisao neko ko tvrdi da je upravo on – Džek Trbosek.

Ime autora ovih memoara je Džejms Vilobi Karnak i oni se završavaju neposredno pred njegovu smrt, obuhvatajući čitav njegov život, uključujući i nekoliko kratkih meseci 1888. godine kada je postao ubica koga će pokolenja pamtiti kao zloglasnog Trboseka.

Cilj ove knjige je da nas nas upozna sa novim osumnjičenim za grozna ubistva počinjena 1888. u Vajtčepelu. Ona sadrži informacije koje, čini se, nisu mogle biti izvedene iz tadašnjih novinskih izveštaja ili bilo koje druge publikacije, a opisi Totenhema iz sedamdesetih godina devetnaestog veka, poseta predstavama Džekil i Hajd i komplikovane geografije Vajtčepela iz 1888. dati su neverovatno precizno. Iznet je i uverljiv motiv koji je Džejmsa naterao da postane ubica Džek, kao i razlog za to da prestane da ubija. S obzirom na to da pisac poznaje detalje slučaja nepoznate javnosti tog doba, moglo bi se zaključiti kako to zaista jeste autobiografija Džeksa Trboseka.

Na kraju je na čitaocu da zaključi veruje li u to da je misterija konačno razrešena, ali čak i ako on ipak reši da je ova pripovest izmišljotina, posredi je ipak jedna od najranijih proznih obrada Trbosekovog slučaja.

„Pripovest nekoga ko je bio tamo, u najmanju ruku prisustvovao scenama ubistav, a možda i sâm počinio ubistva Džeka Trboseka... tekst o kojem će se nesumnjivo raspravljati godinama.“ Alan Hiken

408 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2012

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James Carnac

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 171 reviews
354 reviews158 followers
January 19, 2016
An interesting book about the life of the author who claims to be Jack the Ripper. He lost his leg as a young adult and got a big chip on his sholder. He was quite a vengfull man. His book was very graphic. I would not recommend it to any one who is the slight bit squeamish.
Enjoy and Be Blessed.
Diamond
Profile Image for Sharon Bolton.
Author 44 books4,542 followers
April 18, 2012
I’ve long been fascinated by Jack the Ripper, and in preparation for writing Now You See Me, read widely around the Whitechapel Murders of 1888. Consequently, a book claiming to be a first-person, period account of the “Autumn of Terror” was always going to be appealing.
The memoir which comprises the main part of this book claims to have been recently discovered in the effects of Sydney George Hulme Beaman (writer, illustrator and creator of Larry the Lamb) and to have been written in the 1920s by Jack the Ripper himself.
The author calls himself James Willoughby Carnac, and the memoir, written shortly before his death, is an account of his entire life, including a few short months in 1888 when he became the murderer known to posterity as Jack the Ripper.

Well, we who love all things ripper-related are invariably excited about the prospect of new information!

A few chapters in, I knew I was going to be disappointed. The memoir adds nothing to the existing stock of ripper knowledge, the period detail appeared little more than careful historical research, the tone of the writing simply didn’t convince as that of a psychopathic killer and there were a couple of important but too-convenient coincidences.

Significantly, no historical record of a James Willoughby Carnac ever existing can be found and this seems a major problem for anyone claiming the memoir is real. If Carnac died in the 1920s, as is claimed, there must be some record of his life. Conveniently, he had no brothers or sisters, never married and was the last of his family line. The book suggests Carnac might have been a pseudonym but this makes no sense to me. Why would Jack, at the close of this life and confident he’d escaped retribution, go to all the trouble of writing his memoir only to conceal his identity in the end?

Ironically, though, the author’s biggest mistake and the one to ultimately convince me that this work is fake was the quality of the writing. Its penmanship is close to perfect, a skill that cannot be achieved, even by highly educated people, without years of practice. This memoir was written by a professional writer and I simply cannot believe that Jack the Ripper, in addition to everything else claimed about him, was one of those.

The Autobiography of Jack the Ripper may, or may not, be a piece of period writing, one of the earliest known ripper-hoaxes; if it is, then it can confidently stake its claim for a place in Ripper-lore. What it does not do, as far as I’m concerned, is solve the mystery.
Profile Image for Marvin.
1,414 reviews5,408 followers
September 20, 2013
The entire appeal of The Autobiography of Jack the Ripper is this: Is it real or is it Memorex...er...fiction? This work was purported to be discovered in 2008 amongst the possessions of S.G. Hulme-Beaman, a prolific writer of children tales who died in 1932. The manuscript is authored by James Carnac who professes to be the real Jack The Ripper. Conveniently there is no evidence that Jack Carnac ever existed. It may be a pseudonym for the actual Jack. The book's two commentators, Alan Hicken and Ripperologist Paul Begg leads you to believe there are two possibilities. Either it is an early work of Ripper fiction by Hulme-Beaman, the mysterious Carnac or someone else... or it is the actual autobiography of the infamous serial killer. I suggest a third option. It is a modern hoax not unlike the Hitler Diary hoax of the 1970s. The clues are there based on the fact that it reads more like a modern interpretation of serial killer psychology than an early 20th century memoir. Begg states that Carnac brings up facts that were unknown at the time it was allegedly written. Maybe so. It is more likely these two issues exist because it is a contemporary work written by a contemporary mindset. The one thing that would settle the issue of date is missing: an lab examination of the manuscript by a neutral party, mainly to determine paper and ink age. In other words, the method that bought down the Hitler Diary Hoax. Of course, my suspicions are entirely my suspicions and nothing else. But it would be exciting to see the lab rats determine that it is indeed a manuscript of the 20s. If it really is a 1920s example of Ripper fiction or Jack's actual confession, that would be really exciting.

Unfortunately, that is all that makes it exciting. Contemporary or not, The Autobiography of Jack the Ripper is not very good fiction. Much of this can be blamed on Jack himself. JR, as he is often referred to in the book, is rather boring. He is full of himself, whether he is contemplating cutting his uncle's throat, experiencing his first infatuation, or actually doing his dastardly deeds. JR is quite rightly portrayed as a psychopath and we get some interesting soliloquies on the nature of morality that we might expect from a madman. These are the most interesting things in the novel. Yet the actions and conflicts of JR never come to life for this reader. Tack on a rather pat ending that does seem very 1920s and you have a story that probably would not interest most publishing companies unless a gimmick (is it real or...) was added.

Over all, it is not a bad work. Just not that good. Read it for the novelty aspect if you must. That at least kept me going. But I can sleep soundly knowing that the real Jack the Ripper remains a haunting and still legendary mystery.
Profile Image for Lynne.
106 reviews1 follower
September 3, 2013
Final Verdict: Avoid this book. If you want facts read a book by someone who has conducted research, or if you want fiction about Jack the Ripper, read something else.

As someone who has made my life’s work to study criminals, I have always been fascinated by Jack the Ripper. While I would not consider myself a true Ripperologist, I still read a lot about the famous Whitechapel murders. So when I saw a book about Jack the Ripper on Netgalley, I could not pass. It was with reserved excitement that I began the book.

*Note: I requested this book because I thought it was a fictional account, however it is being presented as if this manuscript was really found. From what I can find, it seems to be classified as non-fiction. That being said, I read it as if it was fiction, and am extremely skeptical of its “origins.”

Unfortunately, I cannot give much more of a summary of this book than that it is the life of Jack the Ripper. “Jack” wrote out his memoires many years after the famous murders and sent the pages to be published after his death. There is a little bit at the beginning to build the back-story about these papers having been passed from different people before someone believed the story enough to try and get it published.

I am not going to lie, this was painful for me to get through, and I really wanted to put it down pretty much the whole way through. With some shame, I will admit, that I really only skimmed the last 50 or so pages–the parts after the manuscript that are supposed to be the historical checking of the story (really just a re-hash of the ‘memoir’ with lots of family histories). Parts of this book really didn’t work for me with my understanding of criminal psychology, and some of the experts’ testimonies really bothered me. The main thing that upset me was a bit claiming that offender profiling hadn’t been ‘invented’ when this was ‘written’. Yet, profiling has been around in some form since the Romans, and it was attempted with Jack the Ripper (source David Canter, 2010).

The story itself is verbose and horribly paced. It is not until about the 28th page that we make it to the part written by James Carnac, the man claiming to be Jack the Ripper (or J.R. for short). The various letters and comments before that were boring when are trite if it is fiction, or boring if it is really a found manuscript. When Carnac starts writing, it is a long ramble musing about his impact as Jack the Ripper and the misconceptions, but also about what those who knew him would think to know it was him. However, what threw me the most while reading was that it was the recounting of an old man, so I knew going into the ‘memoir’ that he survived a long time after the murders. I will come back to this point later. Overall, Carnac just didn’t fit with my personal view of who Jack was, and I never grew to care about any part of Carnac’s story.

I will admit, one of the parts I was looking forward to was the actual murder spree. I was looking forward to reading about his feelings and emotions during this part, and I was completely disappointed. There was almost nothing more than a dry recounting of what happened, and even then without most of the details. The emotions in this part were almost completely missing; there is no talk of excitement or release after the murders, nothing really emotional at all. I was hoping for some sort of compulsion, but it was mostly about a need to see blood that then he never seems to notice during the killings. This may be in part due to the fact that the first man to read the ‘manuscript’ supposedly took out some disagreeable part, but really if this is fiction it fell flat.

The most disappointing thing for me was the part after the murders. To my understanding, serial killers don’t just stop killing, they will keep killing until they are caught, killed or incapacitated. However, Carnac is never caught or killed, but stops killing. It could be argued that he is incapacitated, but I would argue that he could easily have killed in his state. However, the most jarring part was that his urge to kill just seemed to fade. This just doesn’t match with what forensic psychology says, and based on the absolute frenzy that was his last crime scene, this would not be the case.

Overall, I was bored and never connected to any part of the story. I feel that this has to be fiction, and was bored that it perpetuated old theories about Jack the Ripper and serial killers (that he had some medical knowledge, and that he came from a family of killers). I honestly could not wait to finish the book and clear it off my e-reader (which it caused to freeze several times…).

This review was originally posted: http://francesandlynne.wordpress.com/...
Profile Image for Rebecca.
105 reviews9 followers
September 24, 2012
Best Audible selection EVER. Thank goodness I found it there. Super hard to find otherwise! I loved this book. I don't care if James Carnac was the real ripper or not -- I was fascinated by his story.

Ridiculously engrossing. I was all the more impressed with the length they went to in the appendices to hash out the logistics and facts of the events to evaluate whether or not James Carnac could have realistically been Jack the Ripper.

Beautifully sociopathic when appropriate, wholly explanatory. AWESOME.
Profile Image for Ninjakicalka.
170 reviews17 followers
October 13, 2017
Czy James Carnac to Kuba Rozpruwacz i po 40 latach postanowił napisać swoją autobiografię?

„Ta książka rzekomo jest historią Kuby Rozpruwacza.”
„Poniższa autobiografia wygląda raczej na utwór literacki, ale nic nie jest nigdy takie proste.”

+w środku znajdują się zdjęcia ofiar i miejsc zbrodni (jednak nie są one super tajne, ponieważ można z łatwością je znaleźć w Internecie)
+mapa
+fragmenty maszynopisu
+- na końcu znajdują się podsumowania (jednak tę część najwolniej i najciężej mi się czytało) +indeks, dzięki któremu można szybko poszukać interesującego nas wątku
-z książki zostały podobno usunięte najobrzydliwsze fragmenty (szkoda :c)
-za krótka ;)

Książka została podzielona na 3 części - wydarzenia przed morderstwami, w trakcie, i po. Dla mnie najbardziej interesująca była 2, jednak jeśli ktoś się nastawia na rozbudowane opisy zabójstw, to można się lekko zawieść (być może właśnie to usunęli).
Profile Image for Sladjana Kovacevic.
841 reviews20 followers
Read
May 30, 2023
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF JACK THE RIPPER-JAMES CARNAC
✒️"When a man has attained to any degree of note or notoriety he becomes afflicted by the itch to write his autobiography. "
✒️"No; there was no question of my wishing to kill my uncle for motives of dislike or revenge. I merely felt that keen desire to cut his throat as a fascinating experiment because his throat was of a kind to affect me in that way."
😬Navodna autobiografija Džeka Trboseka.
😬U predgovoru je objašnjeno kako je do pronalaska i objavljivanja zapisa došlo a onda je sve to detaljnije objašnjeno na kraju knjige. Khm,malo previše detaljno pa me je prilično uspavao taj deo. Ali krenimo od početka...
😬James Carnac ili ko god da je uzeo taj pseudonim tvrdi da je on Džek Trbosek,i priča svoju verziju događaja.
😬Prvi deo se bavi detinjstvom,odrastanjem,uvodom u događaje koji su samo podstakli navodno urođenu predodređenost za fascinaciju krvlju. I taj deo knjige je zaista jeziv. Nisam psihijatar i senzacije o kojima autor piše ne mogu da razumem ali deluje uverljivo tako da ću verovati da bi zapise mogao da napiše ili Džek Trbosek ili neko ko je bio toliko opsednut njime jer je negde "razumeo njegovo ludilo".
😬Drugi deo govori o ubistvima i tu je ton naracije jos hladniji i ciničniji nego u prvom delu,jer narator/autor svoje postupke opisuje jezivo hladnokrvno. Nema ogavnih detalja,nema previše ulaženja u reakcije žrtava. Ne znam da li je to što je Karnak tako hladnokrvno ciničan jezivije nego da je prikazao svoje uzbuđenje i strah žrtava. Ovako deluje nerealno,ali kontam ako je neko psihopata ništa mu i nije realno,tj ništa ga ne dira. 🤷🏻‍♀️🤦‍♀️
😬Onda sledi antiklimaks,navodi zasto je prestao da ubija. Ne navodi kakve je to osećaje u njemu izazvalo(fizička nemogućnost da nastavi s time),kao da je u fazonu "ok,vise ne mogu,nema veze." Neuverljivo. I sam kraj mi je više ironičan nego realističan.
😬Onda sledi uspavljujući pogovor.
😬Ako ste slabijeg stomaka,reprodukcije fotografija preskočite,crno-bele i nejasne,ali veoma creepy.
😬Zaključak-ne znam šta da mislim ali me jeste navelo na razmišljanje. Valjda i ne treba da razumem 🤷🏻‍♀️
#7sensesofabook #realrosiebookclub #bookstagram #knjige
Profile Image for Ghadah.
121 reviews19 followers
March 3, 2015
Well, this is my first time reading an autobiography, which I believe explains why I felt this book was extremely different from anything I've ever read before.
I don't know if it's wrong to admit this, but I was really drawn to the author's way of thinking. He tackled many aspects of himself in regards of psychology and it was really eye-opening and mind-blowing.
Many theories came out after the official publication of Carnac's autobiography, and some of which went against the fact of him being the Ripper. I, for one, truly want to believe that it was actually him. Regardless of the fact, I found this book intriguing on so many levels and I loved it.
Profile Image for Dijana.
488 reviews51 followers
November 15, 2020
Ja evo ne znam šta tačno ocenjujem ovde?
Dakle situacija je sledeća: na tavanu nekog pisca dečije literature/ilustratora nekoliko godina nakon njegove smrti pronađen je rukopis osobe koja se predstavlja kao Džejms Karnak i tvrdi da je on Džek Trbosek. Dakle, ovaj pronalazak nije početak romana kako bi možda neko pomislio, ono što je nađeno jeste ovaj roman.
Postoji pogovor koji raspravlja o verodostojnosti ovog rukopisa, kao i o mogućim alternativama - da li je ilustrator ovo napisao kao delo fikcije i nikada ga nije objavio, da li je došao u posed nečijeg neobjavljenog romana... Međutim, kako stvari stoje na ta pitanja nećemo imati odgovor. Ne postoje dokazi da je osoba sa imenom Džejms Karnak zaista postojala, a i ako jeste, ne postoje dokazi da je upravo ta osoba naš ubica. Takođe, rukopis je možda pisan pod pseudonimom, a da li je on zaista autobiografija ili delo fikcije ostaje na nama da procenimo. Ukoliko je nekome to interesantno, u pogovoru postoje skenirane stranice navodnog originalnog rukopisa.
Bitan detalj, pre nego što prokomentarišem samo delo (kao da imam mnogo komentara) jeste da je čovek koji je (opet, navodno) bio izvršilac testamenta Džejmsa Karnaka pre nego što je po Karnakovom uputstvu rukopis poslao izdavačkoj kući bio dovoljno trezven da ukloni najgrotesknije delove spisa, pa tako imamo scene ubistava i scene koje slede prilikom bega sa lica mesta, ali smo pošteđeni delova po kojima je ubica dobio svoj naziv.

Što se samog rukopisa tiče, prilično je čitak za nekoga ko navodno nije pisac već želi da ispriča svoju priču. Ne bih dalje zalazila u detalje, niti u analizu iz očiglednih razloga. Moram da naglasim jedino da sam ja ovo čitala kao delo fikcije, pa je samim tim i ocena u skladu sa mojim doživljajem knjige.

Ne znam koliko mi se sviđa odluka Lagune da ovu knjigu štampa fontom stare pisaće mašine. Činjenica je da na taj način verodostojnije izgleda (i slično originalu ako je verovati skeniranim stranicama iz pogovora), a i brže se čita. Međutim, meni je lično bilo napornije da čitam, a verujem da se neko ko ima probleme poput disleksije ne bi najsjajnije proveo.

I za kraj, ko je osoba koja je “Jack the Ripper” prevela sa “Džek Trbosek”? Trbosek? Zaista? Kao
rimuje se, kapirate...
Profile Image for Jo.
3,912 reviews141 followers
November 20, 2022
This alleges to be the memoirs of a man claiming to be the Ripper. Whilst interesting enough and an intriguing story, it reads like an early 20th century novel so I'm not convinced.
Profile Image for Michael.
308 reviews30 followers
January 8, 2014
This is the "autobiography" of James Carnac. A man claiming to be Jack the Ripper. Never does the book claim to be the definitive work of Jack the Ripper.(Despite the slightly misleading title) If you have a interest in Jack the Ripper, you should find this book entertaining enough to read. In my personal opinion, this man is NOT Jack the Ripper. My biggest disappointment with this work was that the original discoverer of this literature, edited out the parts he considered "gruesome" or "offensive" before it was originally attempted to be published.(If it was ever attempted before this book) This left me feeling kinda ripped off, since those details were probably the pieces that most people are unaware of. I have read a INCREDIBLE and extremely informative(and factual) book about Jack the Ripper, and as far as the crimes were concerned, I didn't learn much new info from this book. Even though I believe the book to be fiction, I feel that possibly the most interesting parts were removed. I have pretty good knowledge(I'm FAR from an expert)about Jack the Ripper, and just wasn't convinced this was the man. My 2 biggest disappointments was the editing of the original work and the fact that I feel James Carnac(which there is no evidence a man of that name ever existed)was telling a tale. I'm not upset that I don't believe him, but apparently he himself was no expert on "Ripperology", because he could have told a better lie.(In my opinion) I can see how some people would hate this book.... or how some may love it. Personally, I will say that if you enjoy mystery, true crime or "Ripperature", this book is worth the time to read. But not much more than that. It's not a waste of time, but I would suggest you don't get to excited about this book until you've read it and can make your own evaluation.
Profile Image for Hannah.
25 reviews
January 3, 2014
Whether it's real or not, I really enjoyed reading this book. If it is a real confession, it's fascinating and it is very believable. Personally I'm pretty convinced by it, although of course it can't be proved and there are questions raised, as pointed out in the analysis. I have very little doubt that part three is fiction; it just falls into place too nicely. He mentions a lot of things which seem to have a purpose later on, like the fear of being burned alive. If I were him, I certainly wouldn't be writing down my plans to kill my landlady, at least until after I'd done it, given that the manuscript has already been discovered once. But the other two parts seem to be real, although I'm not claiming to be an expert.

Even if it is fiction, it's still a very interesting read and provides a unique take on the Jack the Ripper mystery. Regardless of whether it's real or not, I would definitely recommend this book.
Profile Image for Ozana Ozzy.
349 reviews44 followers
July 25, 2014
There are many books written about Jack The Ripper, nick name of arhetype serial killer, cruel murderer. His true identity was never discovered, he was never caught or seen. He became urban legend, his name sinonim for serial killers throuoghout the history and unfortunatly, today.
This is non-fictional book, biography type even auto bio. It is said that this is diary found by real Ripper Jack, but like supposed Hitlers diaries I am rather certain that is not real. Not cold enough, descriptive enough, like I imagine real cold hearted killer would write down every gruesome detail about murders.
Anyway, book is interesting enough, love that Victorian era and mystery around it. It is not diary of Jack The Ripper but it is good read if you love the theme.
Profile Image for Mercedes Yardley.
Author 99 books322 followers
June 22, 2020
This is a very cool book that is similar to The Blair Witch Project in its advertising. It presents itself as a lost manuscript written by Jack the Ripper, and the reader is left to wonder whether this is a work of fiction or indeed something from the original Saucy Jack. It's well-written in the style of Jack's time, and covers the author's earlier exposure to murder, why he stayed unmarried, and "explains" why Jack's short, violent killing spree stopped so suddenly. I loved the "this is real" style of the book, which gave a bit of shine that would be lacking otherwise. If you come into it knowing that it is absolutely a work of fiction, it can be a bit tedious and also a little uncomfortable when the author discusses his conversations with the victims before their deaths. It feels almost disrespectful. But when you read with the slightest hope that this work could possibly contain even the tiniest bit of truth, it completely changes the experience. I appreciated the little extras, like the epilogue, appendix, and facsimile of the "original" manuscript, all of which add to the illusion that this could be the real deal. Cleverly done, and I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Michelle Villmer.
149 reviews2 followers
September 26, 2025
After getting rid of all myJack the Ripper books years ago because of the extremely graphic and frightening nightmares I ended up experiencing, what do I find myself doing now? That's right...reading and collecting more Jack the Ripper material. The case has fascinated me since I was a child and is still just as interesting to me today. This book was a gift from my husband. I went into this thinking it would be a clever work of fiction...but it may or may not be and is classified as true crime. The manuscript is proven to be authentic from the time period it professes to be from. There are some things that don't match with other accounts of the crimes, yet some thay are revealed which were not known to the public at the time this was written. An intriguing and thought provoking look into the mind of a serial killer like many others...he likes the feeling of killing. It's exciting. And the victims are certainly better off dead than alive in their pitiful circumstances. Highly recommend!
Profile Image for Maria.
166 reviews2 followers
May 3, 2020
What a load of drivel! This is the worst book about Jack The Ripper I have ever read! Calling this an autobiography is really pushing it as it’s clearly a work of fiction, everything about this book screams fiction! Whether Sydney George Hulme Beaman wrote it or not is clearly up for discussion but to suggest that he could not possibly have written it because he was a children’s author seems fairly ridiculous to me.
Profile Image for Mike Riley.
52 reviews
May 5, 2020
A book claiming to be the memoirs of Jack The Ripper, it is a strange compilation and if it is true then fascinating. Written in three parts with an explanatory notes and an epilogue it sets the scene by claiming it is a manuscript sent to an executor of James Carnac’s last will and testament.

The writing style changes from part to part and contains a story about a man who kills for pleasure and no other reason.

Moderately interesting with an essay about potential authenticity at the end.
Profile Image for Hannah Mc.
256 reviews18 followers
October 2, 2020
I enjoyed this as a work of fiction though I don’t believe it is plausible this man was Jack the Ripper.

Too many questions raised and the ending of the book came out of nowhere. I am fascinated by JR and have read many books about the murders and the victims and I was not convinced, still a good read though!
Profile Image for Nancy.
416 reviews
November 4, 2022
This one was so slow....I did have to speed read through much of the last third of the book. I just didn't care anymore if the author was Jack the Ripper (JR) or not. I did want to see how it ended, but even the ending was boring. Quite a undertaking to make this seem like a real confession of Jack, but still not well done enough and quite probably a hoax/badly done work of fiction.
Profile Image for Oskar.
16 reviews
November 26, 2023
Disgusting and terrifying at times, but at the same time I couldn't take my eyes from it. The parts of Begg's analysis were tedious (especially the one about Hulme-Beaman) but they were worth reading to complete story. I came looking for answers but in the end - I left with even more questions... And I can't complain about that at all.
Profile Image for Mark Richard.
178 reviews4 followers
May 14, 2019
Morbid Curiosity INDEED...
Could this be REAL?
No.
Of course not.
Could it?
No.....Well....Maybe...
This thought alone brings the book to life....
This thought alone makes it what it is.
FANTASTIC
Profile Image for Ashlee Shahan.
208 reviews2 followers
August 20, 2024
I like the idea of this a lot. I’ve always been interested in the Ripper ever since I first heard of him. I find it fascinating that he was never found or brought to justice for his crimes.

If this is the actual autobiography of J.R. this is an extraordinary historical document. If it’s not, I think it is an excellent retelling of the events and what led the person to those events through the culprits first persons point of view.
Profile Image for Amy H. Sturgis.
Author 42 books405 followers
November 4, 2013
The Autobiography of Jack the Ripper is a maddeningly fascinating work. It was reportedly discovered in 2008 in the possessions left to his heirs by S.G. Hulme-Beaman, a children's author and illustrator best known as the creator of the Toytown stories and their characters (including Larry the Lamb) who died in 1932. The manuscript is attributed to "James Carnac," who professes to be the real Jack The Ripper writing about his gruesome exploits 40 years after the fact. The book is made up of four parts: 1) Introductory notes apparently made by S.G. Hulme-Beaman, which explain how he came upon the manuscript while acting as executor of Carnac's estate, but failed to follow Carnac's directions to send the manuscript to a publishing house due to its disturbing and distasteful subject matter; 2) the first two sections of the narrative, which relate the story of Carnac's young life (including his father's murder of his mother and subsequent suicide) and Whitechapel years (including the Ripper slayings); 3) the third section of the narrative, produced on a different typewriter than the first two sections and written in a different, more "fictional" voice, bringing Carnac's story to an all-too-neat end; and 4) commentary by Alan Hicken and respected Ripperologist Paul Begg.

What is this book, exactly? Several possibilities exist. It might represent Hulme-Beaman's attempt at a "true crime"-inspired novel, but this seems unlikely due to both the man's workload and his personality. It might be a novel by another author that came into the possession of Hulme-Beaman. (There is no record that James Carnac ever existed.) It might be a genuine autobiography of Jack the Ripper, and either the author's name is actually a pseudonym or somehow the historical James Carnac managed to live and die without creating a paper trail. Or perhaps it is a modern-day hoax purporting to be a manuscript from the late 1920s.

I went into this with the intention of reading it much like The Lodger (1913), an early twentieth-century novel by Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes, a woman who lived through the Autumn of Terror and evoked it well in her story. As such a work of fiction, The Autobiography of Jack the Ripper is effective. Carnac's fascination with blood, his knowledge of his father's act of murder/suicide, his curiosity about his French ancestors' roles as executioners, and his own strange (and resisted) compulsion to kill his kind uncle set the stage well for the horrors to come.

The descriptions of his behavior as Jack the Ripper offer the most interest. Unlike most works and speculations of the time, which attributed to the Ripper complicated motives (religious fanaticism, a personal vendetta against women, a desire to undermine the police force and law in general), Carnac comes across much in the way we understand modern psychopaths today. He killed because he liked killing, and he got away with his crimes because he was smart enough to choose his victims carefully. His dark, wry sense of humor is both startling and convincing. What is more, the end of the Ripper's murderous spree has a believable justification: Carnac was badly injured in an accident with a carriage (while crossing the street to get to a paper detailing his latest crime), losing both his leg and his mobility.

What I find most fascinating about the book is how it follows and deviates from known facts about the murders. Carnac admits that he had kept scrapbooks of media coverage of the crimes, and the similarity between some of his narrative and contemporary newspaper accounts can be explained by the fact that, after forty years, he returned to his clippings to remind himself of particulars. That said, he also deviates in some critical ways from widely-reported details -- and, in one case, provides a detail only known to have been reported in one account published in New York -- which certainly creates the effect of firsthand knowledge.

The odd ending, with its vastly different tone -- and, seemingly, purpose -- is also a mystery unto itself.

It's interesting to speculate on the real nature of this work. I am not suggesting that I was persuaded that Carnac existed or that he was the Ripper, but I was impressed by the psychological insight of the text and the historical mysteries it provides.
Profile Image for Stephanie Dargusch Borders.
1,011 reviews28 followers
November 23, 2016
Synopsis:

This is the alleged manuscript of the “real” Jack the Ripper. Written in the 1920s by a man calling himself James Carnac, it was only discovered recently in a lot of memorabilia purchased by a vintage toy dealer.

The manuscript is divided into three parts. The first part deals with Carnac’s childhood, which was quite brutal and culminated with a heinous crime. Part two is specifically focused on the murders in Whitechapel and explains the initial catalyst as well as why they ceased abruptly. The third part is decades later, with Carnac detailing an odd circumstance he has found himself in with his landlady.

“Ripperologists” have had a difficult time ascertaining whether this manuscript is the real deal, not to mention confirming whether James Carnac was a real person. The general consensus is that Carnac is most likely a pseudonym, as no records can be found of anyone with that name given the details the author provided.

My thoughts:

I was hesitant about this book at first. I love true crime but Jack the Ripper has never been a case that truly interested me. I think it is mainly due to the fact that it was so long ago. In my mind, if it hasn’t been solved yet, what are the chances it ever will be? In fact, I read this only because my mom read it last year and passed it on to me. It sat on my shelf for a long time and I picked it up only because I was trying to keep up with a spooky/creepy/bloody Halloween theme during the latter half of October.

I could not put this book down. It hooked me from the start, with Carnac’s childhood being far more fascinating than I anticipated. If I remember correctly, I finished the book within 24 hours. The main question that lingered in my mind was Is this a true account? And over a month later, I still don’t know how I feel about it.

On one hand, I agree that there is a lot of information in the manuscript that would likely only be known by the killer. On the other hand, the fluidity and the unlikeliness of certain situations had me second guessing. I can see why there are questions about the validity of the manuscript, but I don’t know that the truth about Jack the Ripper will ever be known.
Profile Image for Rob Bleckly.
Author 5 books1 follower
February 23, 2025
It’s a damn good read, if you exclude all the bullshit surrounding the controversy about whether Jack the Ripper wrote it. It did give me a couple of new words: ripperature – anything written about JtR, & ripperologist – people who are into ripperature.

The novel (IMO) uses a common story device to convey a verisimilitude it wouldn’t otherwise have - a manuscript (typewritten c. 1929, about the murders of Aug–Nov 1888) found years later in the remains of deceased estate and published in 2012. Part 3 is where it goes off the rails. In the last chapter JtR seals his memoir in a stamped envelope addressed to his executer, and puts it in his safe, intent on a final murder, end of story. But wait there’s more – an epilogue – the coroner’s inquest into his death which is part of the later discovered manuscript.

My rating is based entirely on parts 1 and 2 and is short a star because of a weird Lovecraftian fantasy at the beginning of Chapter 14. With that exception parts 1 and 2 are and easy read, engaging, witty, scathing of war, politics, and religion.
Profile Image for D.T..
28 reviews
December 2, 2015
Some may say that it isn't real or that it's all one big lie. What is real? When you think about it, we may be a lie, too. Who would know? If you think that it's real, then it's real. It all depend on you. This book, for me, is real. I lived with this man and his personality ate my soul. It stained my blue dress and made it violet. In every book there is one part of a writer. Jack may be dead in this world, but not in "the world". We made him live. He's still alive, killing each and every one of his readers. He became immortal.
Profile Image for Luismi Fernández.
162 reviews1 follower
June 22, 2012
Not a great book for me. Just the autobiography of someone claiming to be JR. You can believe it or not, that's up to everyone and the epilogue from a famous ripperist is not clearing things up very much either.
Profile Image for Atom Craig.
1 review
December 6, 2013
I enjoyed this book. Whether or not Carnac was Jack the Ripper I don't know, but the story was very dark and sometimes humorous. The last third of the book seemed a little odd compared to the rest. The first two portions were cohesive.
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