Book description
Tales macabre and tales bizarre. All of them with murder in mind.
This is the compendium volume of Molly Whittington-Egan's evocative
and highly readable series of murder cases, The Stockbridge Baby
Farmer and Scottish Murder Stories. Written in a frequently witty and
irreverent style, these stories confirm that while the world has moved
on, the human mind still deals with murder in the same old fashioned
way with motives which have rarely changed over the years. The 36
tales are: 1. The Stockbridge Baby-Farmer: Jessie King, 1888; 2. 'I am
Gall': Peter Queen, 1931; 3. The Half-Mutchkin: Edinburgh Brothel
Case, 1823; 4. To the Lighthouse: Robert Dickson, 1960; 5. Mr Kello's
Sunday Morning Service: John Kello, 1570; 6. The Whiteinch Atrocities:
The McArthur Murder, 1904; Helen and William Harkness, 1921; 7. Death
of a Hermit: George Shaw and George Dunn, 1952; 8. The Light-Headed
Cutty: Mary Smith; aka 'The Wife o'Denside', 1826; 9. The Postman
Knocked: Stanislav Myszka, 1947; 10. Brutality: James Keenan, 1969;
11. Rurality: James Robb, 1849; George Christie, 1852; 12. The
Northfield Mystery: Helen and William Watt, 1756; 13. Blue Vitriol:
Kate Humphrey, 1830; Anne Inglis, 1795; 14. The Battered Bride: John
Adam, 1835; 15. The Babes in the Quarry: Patrick Higgins, 1911; 16.
The Poisonous Puddocks: George Thom, 1821; 17. The Tram Ride:
Alexander Edmonstone, 1969; 18. The Tooth Fiend: Gordon Hay, 1967; 19.
The Icing on the Shortbread: Thomas Mathieson Brown, 1906; 20. The
Misted Mountain, The Arran Case, 1889; 21. The German Tea Planter,
Broughty Ferry, 1912; 22. The Late Mr Toad, The Musselburgh Case,
1911; 23. 'Oh, Loch Maree!', William Laurie King, Edinburgh, 1924; 24.
The Running Girl, Christina Gilmour, 1843; 25. The Travelling Man,
Hugh Macleod, 1830; 26. The Naked Ghost, Sgt Arthur Davies, 1749; 27.
The Cinderella Syndrome, Bertie Wilcox, 1929; 28. 'Holly Willie',
William Bennison, 1850; 29. A Tryst With Dr Smith, The St Fergus Case,
1853; 30. The Wild Geese, the Saunders Case, 1913; 31. The French
Schoolmaster's Wife, Eugene Marie Chantrelle, 1878; 32 The Ice-Field,
the Arran Stowaways,1868; 33. The Toad in the Tunnel, The Garvie Case,
1968; 34. Bible John, the Barrowland Ballroom Killings, 1968-9; 35.
Jock the Ripper, William Henry Bury, 1889; 36 The Quest for Norah, the
Farnario Case, 1929. These stories will delight all true-crime buffs
looking for strange stories from north of the Border.
Molly Whittington-Egan is a leading true-crime writer whose credits
include The Murder Almanac, The Bedside Book of Murder, The Story of Mr
George Edalji, Khaki Mischief: The Agra Murder Case; Murder on the
Bluff: The Carew Poisoning Case, Scottish Murder Stories, The
Stockbridge Baby Farmer and Murder on File.