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  1. Hace 3 días · Miles and Marcus venture into the great outdoors to review Hammer's gruesome tale of Jack the Ripper's daughter.

  2. Yesterday I completed Maniscalco's Capturing the Devil, which is the last book of her Jack the Ripper series. I started this series in 2021 for a literary project when I was in college. I have to say, ending this dark yet intriguing series is bittersweet for me because throughout the books, I've experienced, learned, and felt so much.

  3. 3,608 8 N/A. Gore Historical Action Drama Supernatural Mystery. Publication: 2022, Ongoing. In 1888, a number of prostitutes were murdered in London, by someone known only as "Jack the Ripper". The murderer takes to the streets each day, looking to slit some unfortunate woman open...

  4. Hace 4 días · May 25, 2024. Introduction. In the autumn of 1888, the streets of London‘s Whitechapel district were gripped by terror as a series of brutal murders captured the attention of the public and the press. The killer, who came to be known as Jack the Ripper, targeted women in the area, leaving their mutilated bodies in dark alleys and secluded corners.

  5. Hace 1 día · Catherine Eddowes, who was murdered on 30th September 1888, was killed in Mitre Square, which is in the City of London. As a consequence her killing came under the jurisdiction of the City of London Police and was duly investigated by the officers of this particular force. This section on the police investigation of the murders provides ...

  6. Hace 1 día · The map of Jack the Ripper's London shows the locations of many of the places associated with the Whitechapel Murders. Looking at the murder sites today the first thing that strikes you is the smallness of the locality in which the murders occurred. However, it should also be remembered that in 1888 the area was made up of lots of narrow, unlit ...

  7. Hace 5 días · WITNESSES IN THE JACK THE RIPPER CASE. Given that the area in which the Whitechapel murders occurred was one of the most densely populated districts in the whole of Victorian London, and given that there were people out on its streets 24 hours a day, seven days a week, it was inevitable that people would have seen the victims in the hours leading up to their murders.