<b>Unbelievably addictive - I defy you to put it down! </b>Written with Rubenhold's completely unique combination of sleuthing, storytelling and compassion.
Lucy Worsley
<i>Story of a Murder</i> is <b>an exceptional achievement</b>. Meticulous research and dazzling storytelling. <b>I was gripped from the very first page</b>
THE SECRET BARRISTER
Another <b>triumph</b>. Rubenhold provides a fresh perspective on a notorious crime and in doing so, offers the reader the full picture. Her great talent lies in her scrupulous research and her ability to write real life like a good thriller. I inhaled it.
BELLA MACKIE
<b>I lapped it up! </b>Whip-smart, brilliantly <b>atmospheric</b>, completely <b>addictive</b>. I loved the music hall artistes and had my <b>hand over my wide-open mouth</b> at the audacity of the press. And it is not solely about a murder - though I was filled with <b>admiration</b> for the <b>forensic</b> level of research. It’s also about all <b>the bit part players</b> - the dustbin man who <b>notices</b> an unusual amount of rubbish, the boarding house owner who notices something not quite right about the father and son at the table in the corner, and the world they came from.<b> I can’t recommend it more</b>: <b>I will be thinking about it for a very long time.</b>
RACHEL JOYCE
A <b>fascinating debunking of the myth-making</b> that surrounds Crippen and Le Neve. Putting Belle and her cohort of strong independent women front and centre is long overdue!<b> It's about time Belle became the hero of her own story</b>
VAL MCDERMID
'<b>Painstaking research, married to a novelist's instinct for storytelling</b>, make each new book by Hallie Rubenhold a gripping and educational adventure for the reader. STORY OF A MURDER <b>takes us beyond the infamous Dr Crippen to the lives impacted by him, the society within which he moved</b>, and the public's appetite to be shocked and scandalised. It's terrific'
IAN RANKIN
Nothing but praise for Rubenhold’s exhaustive research and arresting story line. <b>I couldn’t put it down</b>
BONNIE GARMUS
A <b>fantastic</b> read: the story of the women killed by Dr Crippen and how a raggle-taggle band of variety <b>theatre ladies fought for their friend</b>. <b>Crammed with fascinating social history</b> and detail, STORY OF A MURDER is <b>compelling</b> to the very last page
DENISE MINA
<i>Story of a Murder</i> does for The Crippen Murder case what <i>The Five</i> did for the crimes committed by Jack the Ripper. With forensic research and insistent, sympathetic writing, it re-tells the story of the murder of Belle Elmore in January 1910 and places her at the centre of the narrative, rather than the story, explanation or motivation of her killer. As Rubenhold states, “no murderer should ever be the keeper of their victim’s story” and yet for too long Crippen has been allowed to explain what happened to Belle and for just as long we have been too willing to accept his version of events. True crime comes in all shapes and sizes – from the pile it high and sell it cheap, the sensational and tabloid, to true crime that holds a mirror up to our values, sensibilities, and culture and thankfully <i>Story of a Murder</i> is an exemplary addition to this latter category. To put it bluntly, I loved this book and I know that you will too.
Emeritus Professor David Wilson, Birmingham City University
Rubenhold deftly maintains fidelity not only to facts, distinguishing between what can and cannot be certain and proved, but also to narrative intrigue, somehow creating suspense despite decades of extensive journalistic coverage and study of her subject. But Rubenhold’s true mark as a narrator of historical true crime is reinforced in this work by her continued loyalty to the women whose characters and stories have been flattened and overshadowed by journalists’ assumptions, their killers’ fame, or the simple fact of their victimhood.
Kirkus US