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The Last Victim: The Extraordinary Life of Florence Maybrick, the Wife of Jack the Ripper

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236 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

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Anne E. Graham

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Chloe Skelton.
3 reviews
January 20, 2020
I really read this book to link it after reading the Diary of Jack the Ripper. It was a very good book and I really was fascinated by Mrs Maybrick's story. It was a fascinating read
Profile Image for Helen.
1,279 reviews25 followers
August 30, 2015
As an account of the story of Florence Maybrick, this is quite good (especially on the questionable trial and her life in prison and afterwards, down to her sad old age as a mad cat lady). To be honest I thought the Jack the Ripper bit was nonsense: the alleged diary seemed to have very vague provenance and the book is full of unanswered, leading rhetorical questions. There did not seem to be much in the way of evidence placing James Maybrick at the scene of the Ripper murders or indeed any explanation as to why he might have acted like that. Remove the Ripper material and this is not a bad account of the Maybrick case.
Profile Image for Janellyn51.
897 reviews23 followers
February 1, 2011
I've always been fascinated by Jack the Ripper and had read the Diary of James Maybrick a few years ago....I'm thinking it's on the level. Florence Maybrick who was married to said James Maybrick, I don't know....I found it hard to be sympathetic to her. I don't believe she poisoned him. But, she was a creep. I don't think you can assume that if a woman has an affair, of a few that she would graduate to murder any more than I think if you smoke pot it follows you would become a heroin addict, but it does make her seem cheesy. Of course her husband was no picnic, and I've been there and know that sometimes women are just starved for affection and someone who will even bother to talk to them, so I feel maybe I ought to cut her some slack. All that aside, her trial was a travesty of justice and she paid dearly for that. Her mother was from hell, and her whack job efforts to get her daughter released didn't do her any favors either. I found it sort of amusing that on petitioning Queen Victoria for Florences release, the fact that the mother had been widowed young, married a second time within two years, widowed again and married a third time, completely turned old Victoria who wore her widowhood as a badge. Well, the jury is still out on whether James Maybrick was the Ripper, I find his blowhard brother highly suspect, and I don't think Flossie murdered her husband.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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