A collection of 7 essays, originally published in 1936, on real-life murders, by leading crime writers of the 1930s. The first, Helen Simpson‘s essay on the death of Henry Kinder is very dry, as is John Rhode‘s analysis of Constance Kent, this story having interest as being about the events that inspired The Suspicions of Mr Whicher. Margaret Cole on Adelaide Barrett is slightly more lively, being more willing to offer opinion and observation.