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Reviews for Assassinations and Executions: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence, 1900 Through 2000

 Assassinations and Executions: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence, 1900 Through 2000 magazine reviews

The average rating for Assassinations and Executions: An Encyclopedia of Political Violence, 1900 Through 2000 based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2015-07-10 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Thomas Yacob
This book is for you if you want primary sources and you are either: (A) interested in Jack the Ripper (B) interested in Victorian journalism. Otherwise, this book is probably NOT for you, since it is a compilation of the Daily Telegraph's coverage of the five canonical murders of Jack the Ripper (Nichols, Chapman, Stride, Eddowes, Kelly). The editors have included commentaries about each murder, which I found to be little more than a distraction, but might be helpful for someone just getting their feet wet in Ripperology. I gave this book five stars because it is an AWESOME primary source for both Jack the Ripper and late-Victorian journalism and I deeply appreciate the work the editors did to put it together, but this is very much a YMMV kind of review. If you aren't the target audience in a very small niche market, it's probably not going to be your cup of tea. I loved it.
Review # 2 was written on 2021-07-17 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Davin Crooks
In recent years the market has been glutted by books that claim to be the final word on Jack the Ripper’s identity. (I haven’t been convinced by any of them yet.) Once in awhile, however, we get a rare gem that just presents the known facts, without the author’s pet theory ebbing below the surface. The News from Whitechapel is one of these. You won’t find any whispers of murderous Freemasons, homicidal artists, or syphilitic princes in this volume. The News from Whitechapel is a transcription of the Daily Telegraph’s coverage of the Ripper crimes, accompanied by footnotes that cross-reference official sources such as Metropolitan Police files, explain terms that might not make sense to post-Victorian readers, and in some cases correct statements later found to be untrue. Each chapter ends in thoughtful commentary from the authors, but because these opinion pieces are separate from the newspaper transcripts, they do not detract from the unique experience of reading about the Whitechapel murders as our forefathers did- provided that they were regular readers of the Daily Telegraph. Those who lived in Jack the Ripper’s London are all dead now. But thanks to The News from Whitechapel, twenty-first century students of the Ripper crimes can obtain some sense of what it was like to open your morning paper and read about “another horrible murder” in the downtrodden East End.


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