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The Escape of Jack the Ripper: The Full Truth About the Cover-up and His Flight from Justice

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The identity of Jack the Ripper is the most infamous mystery of the Victorian era. Montague Druitt was the original police suspect, but we have never had the full story before, and endless speculation in later books and documentaries: But it was him, after all: The toff in a top hat. Jack the Oxonian. The Victorian equivalent of Ted Bundy: young, handsome, professional, and homicidal. Today, the average member of the public has actually never heard of the drowned Druitt; this century he has not been the subject of either a bestseller or movie. The fresh material and sources in the new book are not found in any other publication, including the following USPs:
Druitt was a medical student who dropped out.
As a barrister, Druitt defended a murderer and tried to blame a prostitute for the crime.
A blood-stained Druitt was arrested in Whitechapel but bluffed his way to freedom by pretending he was still studying medicine.
Druitt was placed by his family, albeit briefly, in a private, French asylum but had to flee as the police's dragnet closed.
The Vicar who published parts of the truth in 1899 has been finally identified (Reverend Arthur Du Boulay Hill)
The famous writer and police chief Melville Macnaghten's close pal, George Sims, published a profile of the un-named Druitt as early as 1891: a young toff, slightly built but athletic, who was not a qualified doctor and who had killed himself. This newly discovered source proves, once and for all, that the police chief and the famous writer knew exactly who Montie Druitt was and was not.
The Druitt family tried, fumblingly, to alert the authorities that The Ripper was deceased while remaining anonymous.
This is the real story of Druitt, the Ripper.

304 pages, Hardcover

Published March 15, 2020

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5 stars
11 (14%)
4 stars
13 (17%)
3 stars
24 (31%)
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24 (31%)
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4 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Leo.
4,997 reviews628 followers
September 6, 2021
This was by far the most disappointing audiobook non fiction of the year. I have been very interested in learning about Jack the ripper and his victims.reading multiple books in the subject and so on, and when I saw this new to me that also promised to tell me who he actually was and that it's been big cover up. That's it's been known for a long time who he actually was.i just had to listen to it!! But the audiobook experience was terrible. It felt so monotone, just facts, name and taste thrown into my ear with out and engaging way to listen to it. It was hard to keep focused on it as it never seemed to have much "written story" for it to be entertaining to listen to.it might have been better to read it and maybe I will in the future to learn who he was. But the audiobook was successful in making a highly interesting topic very boring.
Profile Image for Sarah.
227 reviews2 followers
December 27, 2021
Picked this up at my local library as it looked intriguing.

I'm giving this three stars due to the level of research but this book was so frustrating, particularly when I discovered that one of the authors is a history teacher. The book puts forward a Jack the Ripper suspect as fact and doesn't address any of the arguments against that can be found through a quick Google search. It puts forward an interesting argument but, let's face it - if it was truly groundbreaking, it would have made the news.

It also annoyed me that the book acknowledged Hallie Rubenhold's 'The Five' in a positive manner and yet still referred to the five canon victims as prostitutes.

This book could have been so much more if it had the tenacity to acknowledge counter arguments and the bravery to break away from typical Ripperology approaches of describing the victims. It also can't help but admit that I drifted off occasionally when the book went off on tangents. Tangents are OK if the reader remains engaged and can comfortably return to the central point(s).
16 reviews
January 1, 2022
This book is fantastically researched. The fact that the authors found all this information is ridiculously impressive. For that alone it is worthy of 4 stars. However the writing at points is very choppy and they often go on unrelated tangents that made me question where I was in the book. With all that said I’m firmly in the MJD camp for The Who done it.
Profile Image for Josh.
59 reviews1 follower
April 18, 2024
An enjoyable read, but I hope you like flimsy arguments based on repetitive, unsubstantiated assertions.
5 reviews
December 8, 2025
One of my students brought this book to me, and as a history teacher with a weakness for mysteries, I couldn’t resist. I had recently read the authors’ work on the Shakespeare Ladies, so I felt compelled to give this one a go as well. I’m glad I did.

The authors have produced an impressively thorough study, presenting a tightly argued case rooted in archival research, legal documents, and social-historical context. The tone here is quite different from many popular Ripper books as it is more academic, focussed on evidence rather than gore or sensationalism, and clearly written with the intention of correcting long-standing misconceptions. If you approach it with that in mind, the narrative flows well and the argument becomes increasingly compelling.

It’s worth noting that this is not an overview of all potential suspects, nor is it intended to be. Instead, the authors construct a specific, well-supported thesis, so don't treat the lack of comparison to other theories as a flaw, there are other books that do this if that's what you're looking for.

One of the strongest elements of the book, in my view, is the treatment of the women. The authors actively resist the old habit of reducing them to a single label and instead work to restore their individuality and humanity. Whether each woman engaged in sex work or not becomes secondary to the larger point: they were victims living within a harsh social and economic environment, and the system ultimately failed them. The book avoids sensationalism and makes a conscious effort to place the women, not just the killer, at the center of the narrative.

I won’t give any spoilers, but the research alone makes this a worthwhile read. I’ve already shared it with my book club and fellow teachers, and it’s sparked some excellent discussions.
Certainly worth a read.
Profile Image for Riziki Ní Néill.
37 reviews
June 6, 2024
(I am by no means an expert on Ripperology; this book was my first main foray into the topic.)
The actual experience of reading this book was quite enjoyable; unlike most other historical nonfiction books I've read (and this does seem to be peculiar to historical nonfiction in particular,) the writing was actually engaging and interesting, not overly melodramatic or overly dry. By form alone, this book would merit four stars at the very least.
The actual content of this book, however, is what brought my rating down by a star. The authors bring forth a possible identity of Jack the Ripper in the beginning of the book, and spend the rest of the book assuming that was indeed his true identity, without ever going deeper into why they assumed he was that specific person and not any of the other suspects. Though some of the evidence they gave for this person being the Ripper was solid, in the end, Hainsworth and Ward-Agius present a biased, subjective, one-sided view of the story. However, I do think that overall, this book isn't a bad introduction to Ripperology, if you take the authors' weakly supported claims throughout with a pound of salt.
Profile Image for Joseph Carrabis.
Author 57 books120 followers
December 31, 2022
Purchased for research purposes, its research values dwindled exponentially halfway through when the authors moved from documented information to pure speculation.
Everybody has a theory regarding who Jack the Ripper was. The authors put their candidate forward early and spend much of the book proving their case with little to no attention given to others' speculations. I found this a flaw. There's some effort made to demonstrate their candidate is a better guess than others' guesses and, for me, not enough to make it trustworthy.
15 reviews2 followers
February 28, 2023
I was so excited I love books on Jack the Ripper but this was very disappointing I felt like he was reaching for some things that didn’t add up with an excuse for why they didn’t and just too many holes for me personally
Profile Image for Kevin Barnes.
336 reviews2 followers
September 15, 2025
I felt like the Authors kept repeating the same information over and over again. The research has merit but I did not feel that it was presented in a understandable way, maybe that is why it kept getting repeated.
Profile Image for Howard Sundwall.
114 reviews1 follower
February 2, 2025
A lot of speculation, presented as if it were fact, including completely made-up scenes and dialog.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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