
4*s
Well this collection of thirteen poisoners was a good way to round off a year that has seen me fascinated with the poisoner. Adrian Vincent has found a selection of those who chose poison as a way of getting rid of unwanted people in the UK and the US. This book was originally published in 1993 but has recently been republished by Endeavour Press.
Many of my favourites, including Florence Maybrick are included along with some that I hadn’t come across before. Each murderer, or more accurately suspected murderer is given a short chapter that goes into varying amounts of detail of their crime and punishment.
In order of appearance the poisoners featured are:
Frederick Seddon (1912)
Tillie Gburek (1921 USA)
Everitt Applegate and Mary Creighton (1936 USA)
Mrs Florence Maybrick (1889)
Jean Pierre Vaquier (1924)
Graham Young (1972)
Adeline Bartlett (1886)
Roland Molineux (1889 USA)
Harold Greenwood (1929)
Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen (1910)
Mary Ann Cotton (1873)
Madeline Smith (1857)
Nurse Waddingham (1936)
The author mentions famous expert witnesses, my favourite Bernard Spilsbury appears three of the trials and he also lists the crown prosecutor, the defence counsel and the judge in many of the trials. Sometimes an attorney who appears as junior counsel in one trial is promoted to become chief counsel at a later date, all of which a poisoner nerd like myself found fascinating. It’s like following these men through their careers as an aside to the individual crimes most of which were committed for love or money.
The author has a somewhat off-hand but insightful tone which I have to confess made me smile more than once, as illustration I am using his insight into Jean Pierre Vaquier, a new-to-me poisoner who struck in 1924 in Byfleet Surrey at the local tavern, the Blue Anchor.
Jean Pierre visits a chemist in London for strychnine which he claimed was for his wireless experiments:
‘But you will have to sign the poison book’
Vaquier signed the book J. Wanker, an odd choice for a false name. But it raised no eyebrows from Mr Bland, who gave Vaquier the strychnine without further comment.
Poor Mr Jones was found to have died of strychnine poisoning and Dr Carle informed the police. Our esteemed author summed up the questioning of Vaquier:
At this stage did Vaquier become alarmed by the questioning the police were taking? Not in the slightest. Finding himself in the limelight, Vaquier blossomed like a well-watered flower, happily posing for the photographers when he left the police station.
Adrian Vincent informs us that Vaquier practically took over his own defence when he came to the dock seemingly oblivious to Justice Avory’s pained looks and sums up:
It says much for British justice that all this nonsense was listened to in silence, rather than being greeted with howls of derision, as it might well have been elsewhere.
For these asides alone, I loved the book. No death is so tragic that Adrian Vincent can’t add a little quip about some aspect that brings some levity to the proceedings.
The only downside to such an array of poisoners is that although we have an outline of the cases, there is no deep analysis or thread that examines causes, details the forensic breakthroughs or examines changes in the law that has more or less consigned this method of murder to the history books. Nothing links the cases involved beyond the fact that all those featured either chose to, or were accused of, bumping someone off with poison, the top choice being good old arsenic.
I was lucky enough to be given a copy of this book by the publishers Endeavour Press. This review is my thanks to them and the author for a jolly romp through the poisoners that formerly walked the earth.
First Published UK: 1993
Publisher: Endeavour Press
No of Pages: 250
Genre: Non-Fiction – Historical True Crime
Amazon UK
Amazon US
This came through my letterbox yesterday, courtesy of Amazon. Thanks for the recommendation!
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I’ll be interested to hear what you think of it!
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I have noticed a good deal of poison over here this year. I hope your family aren’t feeling apprehensive about their Christmas dinner…
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It’s a good way to keep everyone their toes 😊
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This does sound entertaining Cleo! Is it weird that I think that?!
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Well you are probably not quite as weird as me who has read a whole stack of books about poisoners this year!
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https://scribbledstories514.wordpress.com/
i love books too
New to blogging
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This sounds really interesting, Cleo! When it’s done well, true crime can be fascinating, and there’s just something about those historical poisoners… Glad you enjoyed this.
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Thank you Margot – it was a good collection to finish the year of poisoners – there are some great historical true crime books around at the moment.
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This book sounds like a nice introduction to poisoners for the layman that I am! 🙂
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You’ll be an expert in no time Donna 😉
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The perfect book to read while preparing Christmas dinner for friends and family… 😉
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Haha the bookshelf with my collection of poisoners on it is right next to the dining room table 🙂
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Ha-ha…the comments above made me smile. What ARE you serving for Christmas dinner?
I’m not sure I could read this one, but I do like the fact that the book exists and offers up history and interesting tidbits. Thanks for sharing.
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Haha fortunately for our guests I’m not allowed in the kitchen….
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I love that you have a favourite expert witness. I really need to read more of this style,of book.
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I have read some great examples of true historical crime this year and this was a lovely little collection.
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I have this one and am really looking forward to it
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It is a good collection and the author’s asides really made me chuckle!
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I always think of women killing with poison, but men seem to do it too. This sounds fascinating. I recently watched a documentary that was similar to these.
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Yes it is often thought of as a woman’s crime but this book had a good smattering of men at it too!
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Do you get many people accepting your dinner invitations, Cleo, after they take a look at the titles on your bookshelves??
Mind you, I have just been persuaded by another blogger to download The Poisoned Chocolates case, and as the fridge is loader with little Hotel Chocolat taster packs ready to be stocking fillers for the hosts and other guests at friends’ Christmas lunch gathering, I better hope no one going knows that I’m about to eagerly pursue a murder-by-chocolate story
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More than I’d like haha – love that idea, if I were you I’d mention it as soon as someone takes a bite 😏
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It would be one way to ensure the rest of their little stocking filler packs of chocs were left uneaten and I could take them all home again for my own consumption…
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Exactly 😊
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