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Arsenic Under the Elms: Murder in Victorian New Haven

Autor Virginia A. McConnell
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 noi 2005
The attorney Virginia A. McConnell provides a riveting view of Connecticut in the late 1800s as revealed through the unrelated but disturbingly similar murders of two young women. The first, Mary Stannard, was an unmarried mother who worked as a domestic and believed herself to be pregnant for a second time. The man accused of her murder, Reverend Herbert Hayden, was a married lay minister whose seduction of Mary was common knowledge. Three years later, Jennie Cramer, another woman of low social status, was found floating facedown in Long Island Sound off West Haven. The characters involved in the commission, investigation, and prosecution of these crimes emerge as vibrant individuals, and their stories shed light on many aspects of the Victorian world: sex and marriage; drugs, from arsenic to aphrodisiacs; forensic medicine; and courtroom procedures.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780803283091
ISBN-10: 0803283091
Pagini: 262
Ilustrații: Illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Ediția:Nebraska PB Ptg.
Editura: BISON BOOKS
Colecția Bison Books
Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică

Virginia A. McConnell teaches English, literature, speech, and criminal justice at Walla Walla Community College’s Clarkson Center in Washington and lives on thirty acres of land in Idaho.

Recenzii

"[McConnell] places the events firmly in cultural context, providing a fascinating glimpse into the arenas of late nineteenth-century law, journalism, morality, and social structure. A superb piece of historical detection that will gratify true-crime buffs."—Booklist

"With a refreshing absence of maudlin declamation, McConnell performs a masterly job of retrieving the lost history of these sensational events. Her crisp prose and comprehensive research make for a lively presentation of many remarkable details as she unfolds a disturbing tale of class-oriented gender discrimination and dramatizes the state criminal justice system in its infancy."—Kirkus

"All in all, this is a well-researched, well-written and engrossing account of crime in an era very different but surprisingly similar to our own."—Megan R. Rooney, Daily Nebraskan