Dina Greaves: Good book i bought for a friend she enjoyed it said it’s a interesting book, arrived on time well packaged worth the money.
United Kingdom on Nov 05, 2023
Nemesis: The books written on the Whitechapel murders could fill a bay of shelves but I suspect this is the first to avoid rehashing the theories over who the murderer or to treat the victims as walk-on parts, but instead to take a serious look at who the women were that lost their lives. I had virtually no knowledge of the misfortunes, hardships and contempt the 5 women endured before they were killed, or of how their lives turned on a moment of tragedy plunging them into poverty, alcoholism and homelessness, and all the while their survival depended on men to provide economic security.
Of course the author has had to make some calculated assumptions given the sometimes minimal or contradictory "facts" provided by contemporary witnesses, but she never passes off conjecture as fact. The facts she does provide are thoroughly researched, something borne out in the extensive list of resources she has examined.
And we are still failing to learn the lessons on 1888 even now, a point the author concludes with, as we see women on the edge of "normal" society as creators of their own misfortunes and to blame even for their own deaths.
United Kingdom on Oct 29, 2023
Donlou: Loved this book. Good to see how difficult life was for the women who became victims and learn about them as people not just statistics. The writing made it entertaining. Finished it in just a few days, couldn’t stop reading.
United Kingdom on Oct 20, 2023
Amazon Customer: This was fantastic and shed a new light on the real lives of the victims. It is so important to know the victims to further understand the crime. It is blindingly obvious this guy wasn’t caught because of how the victims were treated.
Only issue- sometimes what was in the book and what was being read on the audiobook didn’t align- e.g. there was a name that was different on each
Other than that, highly recommend
United Kingdom on Sep 22, 2023
leonard bolton: The book's thesis contends that the five victims were not prostitutes. I doubt that this is the case but even though the author is at pains to prove her point I don't think it really matters. Who could blame these homeless ladies living rough in the London winters, where IF you could eat mattered more than WHAT, doing what was necessary. In that situation I would not blame any girl -- hungry and cold – slipping into hooking when it was the only thing that stood between her and possible death. Morality is only for those who can afford it.
The more preeminent feature of these five, was neither turning tricks nor boozing; it was what the Americans call flakiness -- their decision-making apparatus was thoroughly defective and it is not surprising that they ended up at the mercy of Jack Ripper. Had they had a grain of sense I doubt that they would have met their maker in such a horrendous way.
For example there is Polly Nichols. The readers can read for themselves what she went through on the pitiless streets and in the hellish workhouses and surely if she'd had an iota of rational thinking she would have said to herself that anything was better than that. A normal person would...
United States on Sep 03, 2021
Ga303: I've never had any especial fascination with Jack the Ripper, but snapped up this title practically the moment I saw it because I have always been curious about the five women whose names are only known to us today because they were his victims. Information beyond the scant details one can find somewhere like Wikipedia seemed simply unavailable.
Information apparently was available with a commitment to research, which is the crowning glory of "The Five." I was amazed by the amount of information that was included here about the women: their early lives, families, starting situations in life, and the circumstances that forced each into decline, destitution, desperation or all three. Throughout, I wondered why, especially well over a century after the murders, such detailed and compassionate compilations of their lives were only just now being presented.
I've always considered it so ironic that if you walk around a Christmas shop, or look at everything about the commercial aspect of the holiday that's considered most nostalgic, picturesque or quaint, you can't help but be served with images we think of as Dickensian: Victorian carolers; snow falling lightly on a hushed...
United States on Aug 18, 2019
Uncovering the Stories of the Five Women Slain by Jack the Ripper | The Spy and the Traitor: Uncovering the Greatest Espionage Story of the Cold War | The Last Bookshop in London: A WWII Story of Hope and Resilience | |
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B2B Rating |
93
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97
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97
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Sale off | $5 OFF | $4 OFF | |
Total Reviews | 524 reviews | 918 reviews | 685 reviews |
Publisher | Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; First Edition | Crown; Reprint edition | Hanover Square Press; Original edition |
Item Weight | 1.22 pounds | 11.8 ounces | 8.5 ounces |
ISBN-13 | 978-1328663818 | 978-1101904213 | 978-1335284808 |
Dimensions | 6.5 x 1.25 x 9.5 inches | 5.07 x 0.95 x 7.94 inches | 5.33 x 0.79 x 7.97 inches |
Women in History | Women in History | ||
England History | England History | ||
Women's Biographies | Women's Biographies | ||
ISBN-10 | 1328663817 | 1101904216 | 133528480X |
Customer Reviews | 4.4/5 stars of 9,654 ratings | 4.7/5 stars of 30,572 ratings | 4.5/5 stars of 17,270 ratings |
Language | English | English | English |
Hardcover | 352 pages | ||
Best Sellers Rank | #763 in England History#1,502 in Women in History#5,857 in Women's Biographies | #2 in Espionage True Accounts#3 in Political Intelligence#4 in Intelligence & Espionage History | #42 in World War II Historical Fiction #107 in 20th Century Historical Fiction#570 in Literary Fiction |
Cherryfran.: A wonderful book that is a must for anyone with an interest in the Whitechapel Murders as well as life for working class women in Victorian England. I couldn’t put this book down and I felt the author breathed life into the victims telling their stories in an insightful and compassionate way. Many writers on this subject fall prey to sensationalism and rehash well trodden paths. This author avoids this which makes the book a refreshing read. An excellent read.
United Kingdom on Nov 08, 2023