There are numerous books and publications that deal with the mystery of Jack the Ripper. Some are factual or, at least, claim to be, while others are fictional. Still others blend fact and fiction together. This creates confusion for a person who wants to seriously study Jack the Ripper and the Whitechapel murders. lthough first published in 1994, Philip Sugden's historical investigation of the gruesome Whitechapel murders still stands out as a fact-based classic on Saucy Jack. There is certainly no shortage of books and movies about Jack the Ripper, the mysterious 19th century serial killer of London prostitutes (1888 - 1891). What makes Sugden's book stand out from the crowd is the fact that he started from scratch.
There so many books written about Jack the ripper but I could recomend 4 of them.
Jack The Ripper-The 21st Century Investigation
Trevor Marriott
Release Date: September 2007
Publisher: Blake Publising
Ripperology: A Study of the World's First Serial Killer And a Literary Phenomenon (True Crime Series)
Robin Odell
Release Date: April, 2006
Publisher: Kent State University Press
Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates
Stewart P. Evans, Donald Rumbelow
Release Date: 19 October, 2006
Publisher: Sutton Publishing
The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook: An Illustrated Encyclopedia
Stewart P. Evans, Keith Skinner
Release Date: 10 December, 2001
Publisher: Carroll & Graf Publishers
Whitechapel district of London in 1888
Other names for Jack the Ripper were "The Whitechapel Murderer" and "Leather Apron". //He also called himself Saucy Jack. Depending on which letters he really wrote, there were other names.//
Nobody knows who Jack the Ripper was.
He's not. Jack The Ripper was never identified.
No one was never apprehended as the Jack the ripper.
jack the ripper made his crimes in whitechapel London
toon into casebook jack the ripper and you will get a lot of information.
No, Bram Stoker did not write a book specifically about Jack the Ripper. Stoker is best known for his gothic novel "Dracula," which was published in 1897. The Jack the Ripper murders took place in 1888, and there is no direct connection between Stoker and the infamous serial killer.
Jack the ripper is dead his identity remains unknown to this day.
Jack the ripper according to records he existed
Jack The Ripper was never identified or caught.
Jack Kerouac wrote On the Road.
While 100s of letters claiming to be from Jack the Ripper were given to the authorities, we don't know that any of them were actually written by Jack the Ripper. Some letters are signed "Jack the Ripper," some are signed "Leather Apron" (which is what the murderer was often called before the name "Jack the Ripper" became popular), one is signed "Catch me when you can Mishter Lusk".....On and on and on.In short, no one knows which, if any, was the real signature.There is a book of these letters available if you would like to learn more. It includes transcripts and pictures.