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The Five
The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper | Hallie Rubenhold
Five devastating human stories and a dark and moving portrait of Victorian Londonthe untold lives of the women killed by Jack the Ripper. Polly, Annie, Elizabeth, Catherine and Mary-Jane are famous for the same thing, though they never met. They came from Fleet Street, Knightsbridge, Wolverhampton, Sweden, and Wales. They wrote ballads, ran coffee houses, lived on country estates, they breathed ink-dust from printing presses and escaped people-traffickers. What they had in common was the year of their murders: 1888. The person responsible was never identified, but the character created by the press to fill that gap has become far more famous than any of these five women. For more than a century, newspapers have been keen to tell us that "the Ripper" preyed on prostitutes. Not only is this untrue, as historian Hallie Rubenhold has discovered, it has prevented the real stories of these fascinating women from being told. Now, in this devastating narrative of five lives, Rubenhold finally sets the record straight, revealing a world not just of Dickens and Queen Victoria, but of poverty, homelessness and rampant misogyny. They died because they were in the wrong place at the wrong timebut their greatest misfortune was to be born a woman.
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DieAReader
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Pickpick

#Wardens2024 #ReadAway2024 #BookSpinBingo

🤯❤️‍🔥 Absolutely nothing in this that I didn‘t love! The narration imo was phenomenal. Highly recommended🤓📚

Crazeedi Good book! 9mo
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 9mo
DieAReader @Crazeedi 😏❤️‍🔥It really was! 9mo
DieAReader @TheAromaofBooks 😏📚🤓 9mo
CoverToCoverGirl A really good one.📚 9mo
47 likes5 comments
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Bookfan1414
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I am in the introduction. Not even in the actual book yet, just the introduction! And I have already learned so much! For some reason the killing spree of Jack the Ripper and the Golden Jubilee of Queen Victoria being in the same time period just never clicked. Then there‘s the monetary system. I had some googling to do on that. Again I haven‘t even touched the main book yet! 😳😳😳

7 likes1 stack add
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K.Wielechowski
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Pickpick

Polly, Annie, Elizabeth, Catherine, and Mary-Jane

This book chronicles the lives of the five women who were the confirmed victims of Jack the Ripper. Contrary to popular belief, not all the women were sex workers but all had difficult lives, suffered from alcoholism, were subjected to poverty, abuse, and lived on the streets, making them the perfect targets for the monster hunting among Whitechapel‘s vulnerable population.

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peaKnit
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Pickpick

Finished my first pick from @Birdsong28 #auldlangspine list. After reading this I am very curious to learn more about mid-1800 London. The workhouses and rented beds intrigue me. Id like to know how the city transformed. I may have liked more details about the cases, perhaps because I‘m in Corrections. The victims were quickly written off as vagrants and prostitutes, the book uncovered so much more. They shared a thread of addiction and loss.

peaKnit @birdsong28 Thank you for this recommendation, I also really enjoyed the depth of research on the victims. Sometimes details veered off course for me, but the information developed 150 years later is quite impressive. 11mo
Birdsong28 @peaKnit Glad you enjoyed this. I found that myself that it went off in tangents at times that sometimes slowed the narrative down. It's such a valuable book not just in the Jack the ripper history but in the history of women and our place in the world. 📚📖 11mo
peaKnit @birdsong28 yes, you said that do much better than I did. I was so taken in by the scene and I can imagine losing myself in a rabbit hole of research into how did London get from there to here? The investigations at that time were so primitive and the victims were largely discounted by society. It was well done - it was an arduous task digging back so far with so few records. 11mo
33 likes3 comments
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RaeLovesToRead
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Pickpick

Rubenhold tells the stories of the women killed by Jack the Ripper, giving them back something of a voice in a world that has so frequently reduced them to a gory historical footnote.

Empathic and heartbreaking, the poverty, inequality, lack of social mobility and opportunity for the poor in Victorian Britain are brought devastatingly to life.

Humanising and moving.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

62 likes1 stack add
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sebrittainclark
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One of my reading goals for 2023 was to finish all my #bookspin and #doublebookspin reads. I finished all 24, and 23 out of the 24 I finished during the month they were selected. I love what a wide variety of books this encourages me to read.

@TheAromaOfBooks #bookspinbingo

Megabooks 🎉🎉 11mo
TheIntrovertedDodoBird I love Wolfsong so much! 🎉🐺 11mo
TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! Fabulous year!!!! 11mo
50 likes3 comments
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RaeLovesToRead
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#bookspinbingo @TheAromaofBooks 🥰

Thanks so much for hosting!

TheAromaofBooks Yay!! Looking great!! 11mo
41 likes1 comment
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keepingupwiththepenguins
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Pickpick

The Five is a fascinating and insightful read, one I really wish I‘d got to sooner. If you‘re on the fence about picking this one up, let me be the one to tip you over to the side of “yes”. True crime readers will likely find it dry and scant on grisly details, but hopefully will recognise the reason for that and understand its importance in the broader context. Full review: https://keepingupwiththepenguins.com/the-five-hallie-rubenhold/

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bibliothecarivs
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Pickpick

★★★★★

Unexpectedly excellent.

#fREADom #UniteAgainstBookBans

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TheEllieMo
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Mehso-so

I feel this may be an #UnpopularOpinion but this books fell a little short for me. The social history element is fascinating, the mere fact that it gives the Ripper victims their identities back makes it an important book, and Rubenhold has clearly done a lot of research, but I felt there was an element of the author interpreting evidence to fit with her pre-determined opinion, and despite the research, a fair bit of supposition.
#RushAthon

Andrew65 A favourite theme, but so many that just speculate.
Well done 👏👏👏
1y
DieAReader 🥳🥳🥳 1y
38 likes2 comments
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TheEllieMo
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I am posting one book per day from my extensive to-be-read collection. No description and providing no reason for wanting to read it, I just do. Some will be old, some will be new. Don‘t judge me - I have a lot of books. Join in if you want!

#ABookADay2023

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suvata
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Pickpick

In 1888 a series of brutal killings took place in Whitechapel, London. Jack the Ripper has gone down in infamy. But an obsession to identify the killer both then and now has meant that the victims of these terrible crimes have been largely forgotten. Polly Nichols, Annie Chapman, Elizabeth Stride, Catherine Eddowes, and Mary Jane Kelly all met their end at the hands of this monstrous killer and their lives deserve to be remembered.

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OrangeMooseReads
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Mehso-so

I like the focus on the women and learning about them. However, I found myself zoning out. The women were distinct individuals and they each had their own story, yet they were the same. I hate saying that in this book though the author doesn‘t find that particular super distinctive part of each woman.
3 ⭐️ - Interesting just to learn they weren‘t what/who the Ripper narrative makes them out to be.

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sebrittainclark
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January was the best reading month I've had in a very long time. I managed 5 bingos in my #bookspinbingo! Audiobooks, novellas, and breaking my nonfiction reading into smaller daily chapter goals really made a difference in how many books I could get through.

#bookspin #doublebookspin @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo! Fantastic month!!! 2y
40 likes1 comment
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rachelsbrittain
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Pickpick

Such a brilliant book about the lives of the 5 (canonical) women killed by Jack the Ripper. Victims are so often ignored in favor of glorifying a killer. Rubenhold recitfies this by telling the stories of Polly, Annie, Elizabeth, Catherine, & Mary Jane, all of whom experienced horrific circumstances & were usually homeless (& asleep) at the time of their murder. Illuminating and necessary. More victims deserve to have their stories told like this.

rachelsbrittain And perhaps most surprising to readers will be the fact that three of the five women were never affiliated in any way with sex work. The police generally considered all homeless women to be prostitutes without (and even against) any evidence. Only two of the women can be confirmed by evidence to have been sex workers, and this bias very likely influenced the course of the investigation and continues to color people's understanding today. 2y
melissajayne @rachelsbrittain when I read it about 5 or 6 years ago, I found that very surprising as well. There is an excellent podcast called Bad Women by the author that explores how the five canon victims have become forgotten by society, even from the time that they were murdered & how Jack Ripperolgists have been dismissive of the author‘s research. 2y
rachelsbrittain @melissajayne I will definitely have to check that out! Thanks for the recommendation 2y
55 likes1 stack add3 comments
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sebrittainclark
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Pickpick

4/5

This is a fascinating book the illuminates the lives of the five women Jack the Ripper murdered. It corrects the historical record, for example most of these women were never prostitutes, and details their journeys to poverty and homelessness in Whitehall in a devastating narrative that forces the reader to see each woman as an individual not just some insignificant part of a story that has become almost mythological.

sebrittainclark Thanks @Soubhiville for this recommendation that might not have made it to my TBR otherwise. #auldlangspine @monalyisha 2y
Soubhiville I‘m glad you liked it. I learned so much from it, and felt it was extremely well written. 2y
JuniperWilde I found this book necessary and - at times - devastating. 2y
sebrittainclark @JuniperWilde that's a perfect description 2y
65 likes1 stack add4 comments
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sebrittainclark
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#bookspin: The Five by Hallie Rubenhold
#doublebookspin: Good Inside by Dr. Becky Kennedy

@TheAromaofBooks #bookspinbingo

TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 2y
43 likes1 comment
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booksandsympathy
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I have chosen my 15 favorite books of the year. I couldn't narrow it down more than that. I don't know how anyone chooses one favorite book. These are five of my favorites. Pictured are three spooky gothic books, a cozy scifi about the human condition, and a nonfiction book giving murder victims their humanity back.

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Soubhiville
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My November Wrap Up

The Five was definitely my best of the month. I hadn‘t read much about Jack the Ripper before, but this look at the lives of the women he attacked was riveting. (For a great fiction pairing I‘d recommend People of Abandoned Character, which I read in Oct.)

Others I really liked: Sourdough, Scorpica, Life on the Rocks, Bi, and Fatty Fatty Boom Boom. Only 7 for #NonfictionNovember, but I‘m satisfied with that.

Librariana I love a good Fiction / Non-fiction pairing recommendation! 2y
tokorowilliamwallace O.o Thoughts on You Bring the Distant Near? I picked it as part of my order from the YA/kids sale from Thriftbooks in October. 2y
RebelReader Fatty Fatty Boom Boom and The Five are on my to read this this month. Glad to hear they are good! 2y
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Soubhiville @tokorowilliamwallace I just tagged you in my review of it, I see you had already seen it. I liked it very much! The characters were vibrant, and the food descriptions 😋 2y
Soubhiville @RebelReader I hope you‘ll love them too! 2y
Soubhiville @Librariana another good F/NF pairing from the books above- You Bring the Distant Near and 2y
JuniperWilde Thx - I read The Five this year and will check out the fiction recommendation 📚 2y
62 likes7 comments
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booksandsympathy
Pickpick

Such an important book! We've spent the last 134 years being fascinated by the gruesome deaths of Polly, Annie, Kate, Elizabeth, and Mary Jane. We've elevated their killer as an antihero who killed "prostitutes", when he was just a monster and have dehumanized these five women who were his victims. I'm so glad this author did all this research and wrote this book. I'm so glad I learned about the lives of these five women.

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booksandsympathy

At the time of the murders, the belief that Jack the Ripper was a killer of prostitutes helped to reinforce the moral codes of right and wrong. However, while it served an agenda in 1888, this often repeated line fails to serve any obvious purpose today. Nevertheless it is still the one "fact" about the murders upon which everyone can agree. And yet, it does not bear scrutiny.

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booksandsympathy
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I needed an audiobook to listen to until my next requested one is available and I was reminded of this book I've been meaning to read. Thankfully it was available immediately on Libby.

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Soubhiville
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Pickpick

It was interesting reading this just after People of Abandoned Character, and seeing a nonfiction version of the victims I just read of in fiction.

It‘s disheartening to know that society made such stark assumptions about all five of these women based only on the facts that they had suffered various hardships and were divorced/ separated/ otherwise on their own and very down on their luck. (Also I‘m not surprised- has the view of ⬇️

Soubhiville the unhoused changed that much? I don‘t think so, for the most part. Unfortunately.) 2y
Soubhiville So glad to have finally read this! #fictionnonfictionpairings with 2y
Soubhiville And first for this year‘s #NonfictionNovember 2y
Librarybelle I loved this one and applaud Rubenhold for bringing the women‘s stories to life. It‘s one I constantly recommend. 2y
thegreensofa I am half way through The Five, you have inspired me to pick it up again! 🙂. And omgoodness your gorgeous cat! 🫶😍 2y
67 likes5 comments
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rwmg
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Honourable mention to "The Stranger Diaries" by Elly Griffiths

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Andrea4
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Pickpick

Walking the streets of London, ON, made me extra depressed as I thought about how the divide between those well off and the poor is still beyond staggering and much of the attitudes towards them are the same.
So much of what happened to these women was just by chance, by a change here or there in circumstance. Rubenhold succeeds at showing you what happens when society deems you as nothing or worthless from the get go.

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rwmg
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Pickpick

The 5 in question are the 5 victims of Jack the Ripper. The author looks at what is known or can be reconstructed (there is a lot of “would have“ and “must have“ ) of their lives up until the night each met her end. Except for the last victim they were vulnerable because they were homeless.

A fascinating look at the lives of the poor, particularly poor women, in Victorian Britain, what success and failure meant for them.

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Zephsomething
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Gee does this description of the 1870s-1080s feel familiar or what? Lovely to know we now have the same conditions that spawned Jack the Ripper (most likely because they never really went away)

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melissajayne
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📚The Five, Finding Gobi, The Flight Attendant, The Four Winds
🖋F. Scott Fitzgerald
📺 Friends, FBI franchise, Felicity
🎥 The Favourite, Forrest Gump, Frozen, Finding Nemo, A Few Good Men
🎤Fleetwood Mac
🎶Fame by David Bowie, Fairytale of New York by The Pogues, Fields of Gold by Sting, Fix You by Coldplay, Funkytown by Lipps, Inc.

#manicmonday #letterf

CBee I love the song Fields of Gold ♥️ 2y
23 likes1 comment
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jenniferw88
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#manicmonday #letterf @CBee

Tagged
Susan Fletcher
Fake or Fortune
Five
5, 6, 7, 8 by Steps

CBee Thanks for playing! 2y
thegirlwiththelibrarybag Five!!! Yesssss 😜 2y
48 likes2 comments
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bthegood
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#AlphabetGame #letterf

Tagged book very good

Make a great day everyone 🌞

bthegood @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks thx for doing this, such a cute idea. 2y
32 likes2 comments
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melissajayne
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My favourite #letterf book. She also recently did a podcast based on this book called Bad Women: The Ripper Retold. The book goes deeper into the lives of the five cannon Ripper victims and goes beyond the sensational headlines. #alphabetgame

LoverOfLearning On my tbr for sure! Maybe this fall ill read it. 2y
eeclayton I haven't read the book, but I loved the podcast. 2y
22 likes2 comments
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Deblovestoread
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#AlphabetGame. Today‘s letter is F.

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Beautiful covers!! 2y
melissajayne I loved The Five as well. 2y
49 likes1 stack add2 comments
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JenReadsAlot
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Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Thank you for playing!! 2y
melissajayne I so agree; it‘s my favourite F book as well. 2y
JenReadsAlot @melissajayne I read it years ago and just stayed with me! 2y
melissajayne @JenReadsAlot me too; it‘s just really stayed with me as well. The author did a podcast based the book called Bad Women: The Ripper Retold. I would highly recommend listening to the podcast. 2y
JenReadsAlot @melissajayne thanks I'll check it out! 2y
26 likes5 comments
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jenniferw88
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Had to go to my 2021 reads to find a 5 ⭐ #letterf read! #alphabetgame @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Perfect 👍🏻 📚 2y
eeclayton I haven't read the book, but her podcast about the same topic was fascinating. 2y
JenReadsAlot My pick as well! 2y
49 likes3 comments
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Emma_PK
Pickpick

An absolutely stunningly researched and brilliantly narrated piece on the real lives of the 5 canonical Jack the Ripper victims. No sensationalism, but it brings to life the real struggles and hardships of women in the Victorian era and paints a heart rending picture of what lead them to Whitechapel and shows their humanity and shines a light of truth on history rather than making assumptions.

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JuniperWilde
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My next read is another sort of retelling. This time it‘s the non-fiction retelling of the lives of the five women killed by Jack the Ripper.

Librarybelle I loved this one! 2y
JuniperWilde Good to hear @Librarybelle - I picked it up based on a glowing recommendation. 2y
8 likes1 stack add2 comments
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Adventures_of_a_French_Reader
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Pickpick

Excellent book with plenty of information about the living conditions of women during the Victorian age. Hallie Rubenhold tries her best to reconstruct the lives of the five women killed by Jack the Ripper, from their childhood to the day of their violent death. The focus is really on these women's lives, Jack the Ripper is barely mentioned, which I find refreshing.

MicrobeMom Love this book! 3y
23 likes1 comment
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BeckyWithTheGoodBooks
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Pickpick

Exhaustively researched, Rubenhold tells the stories of the five women known as the canonical victims of Jack the Ripper with great respect and impeccable attention to detail. Dismantling the perpetuating myth that Ripper preyed on “common prostitutes,” their stories shine a light on the role misogyny played in their deaths and in the societal narrative still surrounding their deaths today. An important read for any true crime consumer. 4⭐️

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BeckyWithTheGoodBooks
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Cookbooks and true crime and Litsy. Oh my! #barnesandnoble #saturdaynight

Tamra Sounds like a terrific Saturday to me! 3y
BeckyWithTheGoodBooks @Tamra I‘m not complaining! 😀 3y
18 likes2 comments
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ahomelibrary
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Pickpick

First book for #womenshistorymonth is one of my super favs — The Five: The Untold Story of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold. I absolutely suggest this well researched and presented nonfic. It reads like a historical documentary you‘d hear on TV. Totally accessible to all levels of interest. Also a podcast! Great to learn about Victorian era + women‘s history in that time

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LibraryCin
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Pickpick

I was surprised the author was able to find as much information about them as she was. I was extra surprised to read about Mary Jane Kelly, but I won‘t spoil it! I listened to the audio book and my mind wandered occasionally, but not much. I was interested enough a few times to rewind, as well, so as to not miss what was just said.

LoverOfLearning Definitely on my want to read pile ! 3y
13 likes1 comment
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Bookzombie
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Pickpick

Book 2 for #NYWD22 - This has been on my TBR since it‘s release and @Patchshank ‘s list gave me the final push to pick this up. Rubenhold does an amazing job revealing the lives of Polly, Annie, Elizabeth, Catherine and Mary-Jane and gives us an accurate description of poverty in Victorian England. I listened to this in bursts, because the realties of these women were grim.

Tamra Grim is the right adjective. 😑 3y
52 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Blh87
Pickpick

I just finished this audiobook (not typically an audiobook fan). I wouldn‘t call this an “enjoyable” book by any means , given its content, but it was most certainly worth the listen. I‘m glad to know these women‘s stories…even though listening to how they were treated was totally enraging.

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Daisey
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I finished my December reading with the tagged audiobook, and it was a great nonfiction choice. With it, I managed to include at least one nonfiction every month this year. I had an overall great reading month with 20 completed books, making it my best #BookSpinBingo this year. That includes 5 #1001books, several MG/YA choices for the #TRS2021 list, and a few Christmas audiobooks as well.

#ReadingStats #MonthlyStats

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Daisey
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Pickpick

I was amazed by the amount of information in this book about Polly, Annie, Elizabeth, Kate, and Mary Jean. The author researched so many details of the lives of these women killed by Jack the Ripper and was able to tell fairly complete life stories of 4 of the 5. Hearing the details of their lives and life in general for many poor, working class women in Victorian London was both heartbreaking and infuriating.

#Nonfiction #audiobook

53 likes1 stack add
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Tamra
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Pickpick

I now have an even greater appreciation for the positive impact birth control has on women‘s lives! 😌

Suet624 This made me chuckle. It‘s not the first thing I think of when I think of this book, but you‘re absolutely right. 3y
Tamra @Suet624 😉 It‘s not the main point, but it is one that stuck out for me! 3y
Cathythoughts You finished it ! Well done .. so good and so dense 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 3y
Tamra @Cathythoughts it is very dense! 😅 I think listening to the audio version in pieces helps. It‘s quite depressing. 3y
60 likes4 comments
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Tamra
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Oh my gosh, this book is meticulously researched and includes excellent historical background, but I‘m only about 3/4 the way through the first woman‘s biography and the misery is relentless! I don‘t imagine it gets any lighter either. 😐

Crazeedi It doesn't, but it was a good book 3y
Tamra @Crazeedi it definitely seems to be, but I‘m not sure it‘s the right time for me now. 3y
MallenNC This one was definitely a tough read bc it doesn‘t let up. I‘m glad I read it but it‘s not one that I could read nonstop. 3y
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Cathythoughts Would you believe I‘m still reading this ( on & off ) over a year later … it‘s almost too detailed.. but I‘m not bailing .. just taking my time … I may never finish it at this rate 😂 3y
Pogue My book club read this and it was so informative and interesting. 3y
EvieBee We‘re picking our book club picks for next year and I was considering this one as one of my 3. Hmmm. Make for good conversation? (edited) 3y
Tamra @EvieBee yes! The book is jam packed with topics for conversation given the amount of historical background, especially on the social conditions that existed. 3y
Tamra @Cathythoughts ha! Yes I‘d believe it. I would be better off with the book in print in order to dip in & out. It‘s very well written, just depressing. 3y
Tamra @Pogue very! 3y
Tamra @MallenNC glad I‘m not the only one! (edited) 3y
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AReedCollett
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For #nonfictionnovember, I am reading about the lives of the women who are known as Jack the Ripper's 'canonical five'. It's fascinating that many of the things I thought I knew were actually hear say or fake news at the time. Really appreciate the author focusing on getting to the truth of these women's lives, which makes thier stories more tragic. Definitely a great read!

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Bookwormjillk
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Pickpick

This was such a fascinating book. I really appreciated how it gave voice to the previously voiceless. #LMPBC #NFN21

This is in the mail!

57 likes5 stack adds
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Bookwormjillk
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It was almost sunset before I remembered to walk yesterday, but I got it done. I listened to on of my favorites, This American Life Act V. Here‘s the link if you‘re interested:

https://www.thisamericanlife.org/218/act-v

This one‘s deep. #NFN21

Today I learned: asthma wasn‘t understood as a disease until the 1960‘s. (From the tagged book.)