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A Whiff of Sulphur

by
September 2004, no. 264

The Gatton Murders by Stephanie Bennett

Macmillan, $30 pb, 287 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

The Society Murders by Hilary Bonney

Allen & Unwin, $22.95 pb, 258 pp

The Coroner by Derrick Hand and Janet Fife-Yeomans

ABC Books, $29.95 pb, 227 pp

A Whiff of Sulphur

by
September 2004, no. 264

‘The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist.’ A throwaway line, uttered by one of the low life characters in the film The Usual Suspects (1995), may actually provide a hint to understanding the immense, and unexamined, popularity of so-called true crime writing, at least according to Carl Jung. Since the Middle Ages, wrote Jung, the devil’s role has devolved to evil-doers in human form ‘to whom we gratefully surrender our shadows. With what pleasure, for instance, we read newspaper reports of crime! A bona fide criminal becomes a popular figure because he unburdens in no small degree the conscience of his fellow men, for now they know once more where the evil is to be found’.

The Gatton Murders

The Gatton Murders

by Stephanie Bennett

Macmillan, $30 pb, 287 pp

The Society Murders

The Society Murders

by Hilary Bonney

Allen & Unwin, $22.95 pb, 258 pp

The Coroner

The Coroner

Derrick Hand and Janet Fife-Yeomans

ABC Books, $29.95 pb, 227 pp

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