2-3-4 Challenge Book Discussions #1 discussion

Murder on Washington Square (Gaslight Mystery, #4)
This topic is about Murder on Washington Square
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Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 7669 comments Mod
Any other topics you’d like to discuss? Your overall opinion of the story?


Phrynne | 607 comments Copied from my review!
"Another delightful episode in this excellent series! Notable this time for a sudden jump in the progress of Frank and Sarah's relationship. Even though neither of them is prepared to acknowledge this to the other yet, we know they are falling in love!"


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 7669 comments Mod
That’s it in a nutshell.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 2240 comments The next book is one I haven't read and I'm looking forward to reading it with the group.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 7669 comments Mod
Yay!

I’m glad you were able to recall as much as you have to date.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 2240 comments Jonetta wrote: "Yay!

I’m glad you were able to recall as much as you have to date."


It's a sign of how good the stories are :)


Veronica  (readingonthefly) | 694 comments I thought the little bit about Maria Barbella (Barberi) was interesting. I enjoy getting those little historical tidbits where I can learn something new.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 7669 comments Mod
I found that interesting, too. Terrible situation that your fate is in the hands of the media.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 2240 comments Veronica wrote: "I thought the little bit about Maria Barbella (Barberi) was interesting. I enjoy getting those little historical tidbits where I can learn something new."

The historical tidbits are one of the highlights of the books.


Robin (robinmy) | 1214 comments Sarah asked Frank a couple of times if he was going to give the suspect the "third degree". I'd heard that term used in movies before, but I really never thought about what it means.

I looked it up in the dictionary:

Definition of third degree
: the subjection of a prisoner to mental or physical torture to extract a confession

I wonder how they came up with that phrase.


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 7669 comments Mod
Maybe like third degree burns?


Robin (robinmy) | 1214 comments Jonetta wrote: "Maybe like third degree burns?"

Maybe. It certainly sounds sinister.


message 13: by ~ Giulia ~ (last edited Apr 20, 2018 08:28AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

~ Giulia ~ | 193 comments You made me curious about the origin of the "third degree".
From a google search, I found one possible origin coming from the interrogation of some Templars arrested by Philip IV of France in 1307. These Templars belonged to the "third degree" (first degree: Apprentice; second degree: Fellowman(?); third degree: Master) and the expression is used to indicate a particularly pressing questioning as a means to extort, even with torture, information from the highest levels of the order.
[forgive my rough translation I don't have an english link]

This is only one of the hypothesis, but it's the one I've found that goes the farther back in time and sounds plausible. Still, I decline any responsibility on the truthfulness of this fact :P


Jonetta (ejaygirl) | 7669 comments Mod
Thanks for that research, Giulia! Incredibly interesting.


Lauren (laurenjberman) | 2240 comments That is very interesting, Giulia. I'd heard the term before and knew it related to interrogation, but wasn't aware of its origins.
Thanks for the info!


Robin (robinmy) | 1214 comments Thanks Giulia. I always wonder about some of the phrases that are used and what their origin is.


Charlene (charlenethestickler) | 1392 comments Thanks, Giuilia. I thought it might have something to do with the Masonic orders, as well, but didn't look it up.


Veronica  (readingonthefly) | 694 comments That makes sense to me. Thanks for looking it up, Giulia.


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