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Showing posts with label Hallei Rubenhold Story of a Murdr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hallei Rubenhold Story of a Murdr. Show all posts

Friday, 10 July 2026

Hallie Rubenhold Story of a Murder: the Wives, the Mistress and Doctor Crippen

 




Modern book publishing is a branch of the packaging industry, as a visit to Waterstones will attest. It is necessary to open the pages to get a first sense of whether the text is the work of an author or a content creator. This one is definitely the work of an author.

Hallie Rubenhold is a serious social historian who researches thoroughly and writes measured prose, both evidenced in this book as in her previous one The Five. Here she is re-telling the stories of the wife-murderer Dr Crippen, his two wives, and his mistress who was acquitted of any complicity in the murder of the second wife but who Rubenhold thinks was both more knowledgeable and more culpable than she ever admitted. Part of her argument is that the mistress, Ethel de Neave, was very much an agent though strategically depicted by her 1910 defence counsel as a victim. To me, this has contemporary relevance in a world where journalists continue to operate more or less automatically with the trope of the female victim. It makes for a simpler, less challenging story, and a preferred narrative of female weakness, “vulnerableyoungwoman” a journalistic cliché.

Rubenhold’s detailed and quite leisurely narrative held my attention; towards the end she springs some surprises in the form of evidence, recorded at the time, but which was not brought to court. She leaves some questions open though in one case I felt she left a small part of the story simply  unfinished: stuff was burnt in the gardens of Crippen’s house after the murder but what was being burnt is not clarified.

Like her previous one, a very good book.