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4.0 out of 5 stars
New twist on the Jack the Ripper book industry, May 23, 2002
This is rare-perhaps even unique-among novels of Jack the Ripper in being about his victims as distinct from the killer;true his identity is revealed towards the end of the novel but this is not the main concern of the book or the author.It is ,rather,an examination of the social conditions in the London of the 1880's as seen through the eyes of "Mary Kelly"who has returned to the city having done well for herself in Canada as first a whore and then a "Madam"She is posing as a well to do widow come to visit relatives,but her real purpose is to try to locate her two sisters both also named "Mary Kelly"whom she had left behind when fleeing London a decade earlier to avoid the violent and unwanted attentions of her pimp,who is none other than the Ripper.
She is a modern woman-feisty and independent,well able to look after herself but clearly taken aback by the conditions in Whitechapel where 1 in 20 economically active women is a prostitute and squalor sits cheek by jowl with rank and privilege.
The book is the tale of her search for the sisters and how this brings her on a collision course with the Ripper
The portrait of London is vivid and detailed-with its poverty and tawdriness the obverse of Imperial bombast and grandeur.It is important to be reminded that perhaps the least important part of the whole sorry story is the identity of the killer and that the real story is of the victims both of the odious barbarian and of the society of the day with its despair,poverty and casual racism(especially Anti-semitism)These are not shirked in a gruelling and powerful piece of work with a heroine both memerable and likeable
Nopt for "Ripperologists" that peculiar breed but recommended if yo like novels of the past with roots in reality
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