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Bezig met laden... Portrait Of A Killer: Jack The Ripper -- Case Closed (Berkley True Crime) (origineel 2002; editie 2003)door Patricia Cornwell
Informatie over het werkPortet van een moordenaar door Patricia Cornwell (2002)
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. For some reason, this book just could NOT hold my attention. I was disappointed because I had so looked forward to reading it. ( ) I found this book very interesting and convincing that Walter Richard Sickert, an English painter, could have been Jack the Ripper. The circumstantial evidence found by Ms. Cornwell was thoroughly researched and overwhelming. We'll never know whether or not Sickert is the famous killer; however, his paintings and lifestyle support the claim. I did learn more about the East End of London in the 1880s than I wanted to. Several English writers, such as Charles Dickens, and artists came to Five Points in New York to view the squalor and drunkenness. I can't imagine why when they had their own putrid slums right there at home. She takes the slightest bit of circumstantial evidence and tries to turn it into fact. She presents situations initially as hypothetical, but then bases later conclusions upon the belief that these are true. When read with an unbiased mind it is clear that the author started with the presumption of guilt and built a convoluted and laughable tale to try and justify her verdict. Having recently sworn off Cornwell's fiction, I decided to give this last title on my shelves a try, more out of a passing interest in the crimes than out of any sense of rehabilitating Cornwell's writing. Sure enough, Cornwell's bitter pride still shines through in this attempt to identify and convict a man in the court of public opinion. Cornwell knows enough about behavioral analysis to get her into trouble. Certainly, Sickert bore an unusual interest in the gory and sensational crimes, and probably had a similar unnatural interest in violence, particularly against women. But the evidence in his paintings and writings doesn't pass the smell test for evidence of guilt, Cornwell herself admits he was around the crime scene areas and the places where the victim's plied their trade. It's not much of a stretch to think that Sickert simply collected images and impressions from these experiences to include in his work, including his writing. All of the imagery would've fueled his active and creative imagination and tapped into his taste for violence. And Cornwell also admits Sickert was quite the performer, a seeker of attention. Again, it's not tough to imagine his use of the collected information to create more of a stir around his work. There's nothing definitive to prove Sickert's guilt, not for lack of Cornwell trying to convince everyone. But the strength of her personality can't make her take on things into any certainty. The redeeming characteristic in the book is Cornwell's surprising research abilities. More than anything, the book carries a great flavor of Victorian England. 3 bones!!! geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de uitgeversreeks(en)Onderscheidingen
Onderzoek naar de ware identiteit van Jack the Ripper, de legendarische moordenaar die in de jaren tachtig van de negentiende eeuw in Londen een reeks moorden pleegde. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden.
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)364.1523092Social sciences Social problems & social services Criminology Criminal offenses Offenses against persons Homicide Murder History, geographic treatment, biography BiographyLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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