
The Fatal Passion of Alma Rattenbury
Description
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'Superbly evocative and gripping.' The Spectator
'Sean O'Connor can't resist striking a theatrical note in this "biography of murder".' Sunday Times
Adultery, alcoholism, drugs and murder on the suburban streets of Bournemouth.
The Rattenbury case of 1935 was one of the great tabloid sensations of the interwar period. The glamorous femme fatale at the heart of the story dominated the front pages for months, somewhere between the rise of Hitler and the launch of the Queen Mary.
With painstaking research and access to brand new evidence, Sean O'Connor vividly brings this epic story to life, from its beginnings in the South London slums of the 1880s and the open vistas of the British Columbian coast, to its bloody climax in a respectable English seaside resort.
The Fatal Passion of Alma Rattenbury is a gripping murder story and a heartbreaking romance as well as the biography of a vital, modern woman trapped between the freedoms of two world wars and suffocated by the conformity of peacetime. A startlingly prescient parable for our times, it is the story of a woman who dared to challenge the status quo only to be crucified by public opinion, pilloried by the press and punished by the relentless machinery of the British legal system.
With a wealth of fascinating period detail, from its breathtaking opening to its shocking conclusion, The Fatal Passion of Alma Rattenbury is a true story as enthralling, as provocative and as moving as any work of fiction.
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Person
For the theatre he has adapted Boileau and Narcejac's Vertigo and Winston Graham's Marnie. His adaptation from Shakespeare, Juliet and Her Romeo, re-opened Bristol Old Vic in 2010, directed by Tom Morris, and was published by Oberon. In 2013, he published Handsome Brute, a study of the 1940s murderer Neville Heath.
Content
- Cover
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Cast of Characters
- Foreword
- Prologue: Bournemouth, 24 March 1935
- Act One
- 1. From London to Victoria
- 2. Miss Clarke
- 3. Mrs Dolling
- 4. France
- 5. Mrs Pakenham
- 6. Mr Rattenbury
- 7. The Second Mrs Rattenbury
- Entr'acte: Holloway, 9 January 1923
- Act Two
- 8. A Third England
- 9. Villa Madeira
- 10. Stoner
- 11. Night Brings Me You
- 12. The Place Where a Bad Thing Happened
- 13. Cause Célèbre
- Entr'acte: Sing Sing, 12 January 1928
- Act Three
- 14. The Old Bailey
- 15. As for the Woman
- 16. A Woman of Principle
- 17. The Son of Any One of Us
- 18. Leave Her to Heaven
- 19. Stay of Execution
- Epilogue: Taliesin, 15 August 1914
- Afterword
- Appendix of Songs by Lozanne
- Acknowledgements
- About the Author
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Copyright
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