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December 2020 & January 2021 - Non Fiction Group Read - The Five: The Untold Lives of the Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold
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Alannah
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rated it 4 stars
Nov 22, 2020 09:40AM

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These women remind me of our current missing First Nations women. The cycles of poverty, oppression and addiction. Incredibly hard to hear at times.
I read this while also reading A Christmas Carole: Dickens' Classic Illustrated by Ronald and the two complemented each other to provide a picture of the time.
This book does struggle with the same issues as Stolen Continents: 500 Years of Conquest and Resistance in the Americas which deals with the oppression of the civil actions in the Americas. The stories are repetitive and depressing. The conclusion is very strong and helps the book retain its 4 ⭐️ rating.
And important work in women’s history.




I will share my thoughts here when I am done, just don't expect a five star review haha. I am just not one for writing book reviews.

Jade wrote: "Took a break to finish Dombey and Son but so far I feel the author is trying stretch the sources she does have very thinly. I feel if I were to present this as an essay. It wouldn’t get great marks."
I am glad I am not the only one who thought that. Felt like the author was trying so hard to change this perception so many people have had of the victims with very little evidence.
I am glad I am not the only one who thought that. Felt like the author was trying so hard to change this perception so many people have had of the victims with very little evidence.


Six of my own family... great grandparents brought up their families in relative poverty in London in the last quarter of C19and first dozen years of C20. Rubenhold has given me a deeper dive into the strata of lives of the period and its many vulnerabilities. My maternal grandfather was taken in as a border, aged seven, when his ex soldier father died, to a military school around 1890 and refused to leave when his mother turned up two years later with another man in tow. He had shoes on his feet and was being cared for and educated. The school also encouraged his latent musicality which gave him such joy throughout his life. Such a school is described by Rubenhold as one of the victims attended it.
The book is a powerful social history and it is deeply ironic that these five women, through the macabre association of their deaths, provide such a broad and contrasting glimpse into the lives of the countless forgotten women of the era.

I did end enjoying this book, I liked that the author attempted to give the victims back their identity as they were obviously much more than a name and a statistic to their families and friends. I’m glad I listened to this book as it helped give me more insight to these women.