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Story of a Murder

The Wives, the Mistress, and Dr. Crippen

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This is the story of a murder, not a murderer . . .
In this epic examination of one of the most infamous murders of the twentieth century, bestselling author of The Five, Hallie Rubenhold, gives voice to those who were never properly heard—the women.
On February 1, 1910, the vivacious, diamond-adorned music hall performer Belle Elmore suddenly vanished from her home, causing alarm among her friends, the entertainers of the Music Hall Ladies’ Guild. Their demands for an investigation would lead to the unearthing of a gruesome secret and trigger a fevered international manhunt for Belle’s husband, medical fraudster Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen.
Ethel Le Neve, Crippen’s typist and lover, who fled with Crippen in disguise, has always hidden in the shadows of this tale—was she really just "an innocent young girl" in thrall to a powerful older man? And was there an equally sinister story behind the death of Crippen’s first wife, Charlotte?
Brimming with twists and featuring a carnival cast of eccentric entertainers, star lawyers, zealous detectives, medics and liars, Story of a Murder offers an electrifying snapshot of Britain and America at the dawn of the modern era.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2025
      A comprehensive telling of the North London Cellar Murder and its aftermath. Kunegunde (often spelled Kunigunde) Mackamotzki had other names and trajectories before she became Belle Elmore, a singer, friend, and Music Hall Ladies Guild treasurer who was brutally killed by her husband in early 1910. Hawley Harvey Crippen was a fraudster preoccupied with wealth and notoriety who moved mysteriously between questionable business enterprises and romantic interests. And Ethel Le Neve was the last of Crippen's paramours, boldly winding through her own layers of obfuscation and opportunism into both his workplace and his home. While Belle's killing and Crippen's and Le Neve's arrests and trials became the stuff of cultural legend, the maze between these three individuals has long been muddied by deceptions, omissions, and inaccuracies. Rubenhold, whose previous work includesThe Five: The Women Killed by Jack the Ripper, leaps into the dark holes in the historical record with her trademark commitment to reorienting mythologized true-crime stories around the stories of the victims. She meticulously constructs the fullness of the web that contains Belle, Crippen, and Ethel, along with the friends, colleagues, and family members affected by Belle's murder, sketching the turn-of-the-century backdrop with notes on the era's medical practices, London's sphere of stage performers, and the influential notion of the "New Woman." The author 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. A satisfying read that gives the impression that some new justice has been done.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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