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True Crime Through History

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590 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1989

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Richard Glynn Jones

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June 27, 2009
Enjoyed this, although it would have been nice to have the source of each extract properly cited under each. I often wanted to know when such-and-such had been written. Did finally find some acknowledgements tucked away at the back, but too late!

Random things of interest learned from this book:

- Samuel Dougal, wife-murderer, made many servant-girls pregnant. When not engaged in this, however, "another of his activities had been teaching girls to ride the new bicycles, which he thought best done without clothes on."

- Albert Fish really should have found another hobby. Besides molesting over 100 children, murdering several, and cannibalising at least one, he "had eaten his own excrement; he had put pieces of cotton, saturated with alcohol, up his rectum and set fire to them; he had, over a period of years, stuck needles into his body in the region of his genitals, and a series of x-ray photographs...showed that 29 of these needles - some eroded with rust - were still lodged in him".

- J.G. Haigh, the acid-bath killer, "spent his time in prison...doing some curious experiments with mice; he found they could be dissolved in sulphuric acid". Granted, the country had bigger fish to fry while he was incarcerated, but I still can't see how or why he would have been able to do this. I sure as hell wouldn't be giving convicts concentrated acid to do experiments with.

- Mark David Chapman was described by one friend in Hawaii as "nothing more than an innocuous soul 'who ate a lot of peanuts.'"

The book has not been copy-edited particularly well, and is full of mistakes that are often amusing.

- The pseudo-wife of one murderer migrated with him to the US in 1889, although apparently returned without him in 1981.

- The Boston Strangler apparently had "a 'record' - but only of pretty crimes, mostly breaking and entering".
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