'Beyond Belief' is probably the most famous of all the books written about the 'Moors Murders' case. The reason may be that the author was the well-known actor and playwright Emlyn Williams. To be honest, I'm not too sure how to rate this one. In terms of its writing, I'd have to say four, but rating it as an actual book about the case, I'd have to say three.
Published in 1967, Williams decided not to do a straight 're-telling' of the crimes, which was done by plenty of others, but to give it the 'In Cold Blood' treatment. Written as a novel, he uses accents: Glaswegian for Brady and Mancunian for Hindley. This might prove difficult for some readers to understand, but it caused no problems for me. The only real problem is that so much more has come to light now, and a lot of Williams' theories have proven incorrect, which is not his fault, I know.
The first few chapters detail the disappearances of two children in Manchester, followed by a teenager who went into town in 1965, never to return home. Williams did a marvellous job with this, and one reading can't help but feel caught up in the children's families' anguish and trauma during the search for their loved one. Like the rest of the book, Williams manages to put his readers 'right there' in the action, and the constant pop culture references of contemporary music and films, headlines, etc, only add to making one feel now that they have been transported back to the 1960s. It's all very atmospheric, and as a film buff, I kept a list of the obscure titles mentioned.
When dealing with the childhoods of the murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley, Williams also did well, although I feel that one of the chapters about Brady could have been condensed into one. Williams did his research for every aspect of this book very well indeed, speaking to those who knew the killers at various stages and also conducting interviews with, among many others, David Smith and his wife, Maureen, who was Hindley's sister. He managed to obtain Hindley's diary, written before she met Brady, and saw the pornographic photos they took of each other.
Now, it is only in the chapters covering Brady and Hindley's alliance and crimes that 'Beyond Belief' doesn't hold up as well. I must stress that not once does Williams mislead the reader. He made it clear at the start that he'd had to 'summarise' things to fill in pieces of information that were not known, but I found some of the conversations he invented between the killers naïve at best, and embarrassing at worst. He reconstructs them when they were picking up victims and taking them to the moors, explaining how Hindley was feeling at the time. It's his portrayal of Hindley as just a follower of Brady being in total command that I find the most distracting. She hated the book as she felt Williams portrayed her as ''a hard cow,'' which I think was entirely on the mark. Of course, hindsight is wonderful, and had Williams known what we all know now, he could have really created something on par with the celebrated 'In Cold Blood.'
The book then picks up again when it progresses to the murder of the last victim, and it was chilling to read. I, for one, wouldn't have liked to have been in the shoes of David Smith, who witnessed the murder, but instead of being hailed as the man who turned the killers in, many local people believed he was as guilty as they.
I enjoyed the chapters regarding the police investigation, and as always, the readers feel like they are watching on. The evidence that the officers found unravels before us, and made me thankful that I was not one of those involved. At the end, everything is wrapped up in the appendix. Well, I say almost, the trial is briefly outlined, but there are references to two other children. They were still missing at the time, and it was only two decades later that it was known for sure that Pauline Reade and Keith Bennett had also fallen foul of Brady and Hindley.
I would never have underestimated Emlyn Williams' knowledge of this case, and, not counting the aforementioned poorer chapters, he wrote a very good book that still has the power to chill and unsettle. 'Beyond Belief' is certainly not 'dry,' and was still in print and being sold in new book stores until at least 2004 (that's when I read it first, and not just the once.) There is much to recommend here, but it should be read alongside a more factual treatment to give the reader a more accurate picture.