I must preface this review by saying that I know nothing about Jack the Ripper or the theories about how and why he killed his victims. Therefore, I found it an entertaining read and an intriguing mystery all the while knowing it was historically inaccurate and one of many theories out there. I found this theory credible enough to believe. It's another book in the series featuring one or more historic figures and events that are seamlessly woven together with fictional characters and events. This plot involves Jack the Ripper, blackmail, and the author's conspiracy theory surrounding the ghastly and unsolved murders, who was involved, why the crimes happened, and the scandal involved. At the beginning of each chapter are short excerpts from letters, writings, books, newspapers, etc. which enhance what the chapter is going to reveal.
The book begins in 1898 when a young Winston Churchill (24 years old) is welcomed home by his mother, Lady Randolph Churchill, after a glorious victory from the Egyptian campaign at Omdurman. She is living way beyond her means, being blackmailed, and frightened that her deceased husband, Lord Randolph Churchill, may be Jack the Ripper. Winston's burgeoning political career would be shattered if a photograph she received of her former husband and the Ripper's latest victim, Mary Kelley, was published. The picture was accompanied by a note signed "A. Byrd" and stated that unless she gave him 100 pounds, the photo would be released to the newspapers. Taking advice from a friend Jennie contacts Lord Charles Sheridan and Lady Kathryn Ardleigh - our husband and wife sleuthing team - to make this all go away.
Charles determines the photograph is fraudulent and a composite, but he needs the negative for corroboration. Kate is an Irish American who inherited her aunt's estate, Bishop's Keep, and has a secret literary career writing sensational dramatic stories under the pen name of Beryl Bardwell. To accomplish this, she researches true crime stories like those of Jack the Ripper's which occurred ten years earlier. She also has brains, courage, an independent spirit, a quick wit and resourcefulness and compliments her husband's interest in science, fingerprinting, and other forensic endeavors. Kate works separately for a while when she and Jenny investigate the scene of the crimes and interview people who might know something. They disguise themselves as Irish relatives of one of the victims, Mary Kelley and visit the dirty alleys of the East End. Everybody they talk to refuse to tell them anything they might have saw or heard. Charles goes on the hunt for the negative.
Jennie also gets a summons from the blackmailer, but when she arrives at his place heavily veiled, she finds him murdered. Now the police are looking for the mysterious woman who visited Tom Finch just before he died. More fodder to ruin Winston's political career. After receiving a clue from Fred Abberline, a retired Scotland Yard Detective Inspector, Charles seeks out Walter Sickert, an artist who befriended Prince Eddy, Queen Victoria's grandson. He tells Charles the whole sordid story of what happened.
Subplots include:
- Jennie Churchill is working on the first issue of her new literary magazine to be called The Anglo-Saxon Review. Her managing editor is Manfred Raeburn. He has secrets of his own. Some contributors to the magazine are to be Beryl Bardwell, Algernon Swinburne, Henry James, and the Duke of Devonshire.
- Jennie Jerome Churchill is having an affair with George Cornwallis-West who is obsessed with her. He has become a complication in her life as he dogs her every step. How to get rid of him?
- Sarah Pratt, the cook at Bishop's Keep hasn't seen her husband for 22 years and calls herself a widow because of his shameful imprisonment for stealing three quid from his boss. Now he shows up on her kitchen doorstep and tells her to supply provisions for him or he will make her resume her marital duties. It won't be a onetime thing so how to get rid of him? Mary Plumm, the kitchen maid, refuses to do her chores when she eavesdrops and finds out what is going on. How can Mrs. Pratt keep two forms of blackmail from Lady Kate when things go missing?
At the back of the book is a list of references that the authors found helpful in writing this book. Other names dropped in the plot include Bram Stoker, Whistler, Oscar Wilde, and Bernard Shaw. In this well researched book, there are plenty of twists, turns, and red herrings. There are also some great descriptive passages of social and political life in Victorian England. My question is - what happened to Patrick? - the young boy Charles and Kate were going to take in and maybe adopt from the last book. Recommended series.