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Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 7:08 pm
by Kat
http://lizzieandrewborden.com/Resources ... hyCase.htm

Above is a link to Stef's bibliography on the Borden case found at the LABVM/L website.
It will be updated in not too long- however if someone can't spare a lot of money on guessing which books to go after they can try this first.

It can be "Word Searched." It says that poem is also in Proceedings.

Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:01 pm
by Allen
I'm reading a book at the moment entitled A Sense of History: The Best Writing from the Pages of American Heritage. I picked up the book from the library because of a story it contains about the mysterious death of Sarah Cornell of Fall River in 1832 entitled ' The Minister and the Mill Girl', which begins on page 199 and finishes on page 232. What I did not notice until a little while ago, is that at the beginning of the book are a list of the places and events in time the author wishes he had been around to see in a section if the book entitled 'I Wish I'd Been there'. I noticed it because I checked out the bibliography for the LABVM and noticed that the book I was holding in my hand was on there :grin: . I'm sure many of you have read this before, but it's the first time I have ever read it. On page 27 is:

The Fall River Legend.

I would be invisible but nonetheless present in a certain house at 92 Second Street in Fall River, Massachusetts, on the sweltering hot morning of August 4, 1892. At breakfast I would join elderly, tightfisted Andrew Borden, his second wife, Abby, rather stout at two hundred pounds and five feet tall, and Lizzie, the thirty-two-year old unmarried daughter of Andrew and his first wife. The necessity of my invisibility would become only too apparent later in the morning, but at this point I would be rather thankful to be under no obligation to partake of the cold mutton, bananas, and black coffee.

Following this meal, the last for Andrew and Abby, I would observe Andrew leaving the house for a walk, after meticulously locking the door, as was his habit. I wouldn't have long to wait --perhaps and hour at most --before learning the secret that has mystified generations of Americans, and put the name Lizzie Borden forever into the annals of American legend.

In the second-floor guest bedroom around ten o'clock I would see the hand that held the hatchet and the nineteen blows that rained down on Abby's head and shoulders. I would hear Lizzie laughing as the Borden maid, Bridget, struggled with the locked door to let Andrew back in the house about an hour later. I would observe him lying down on the sitting room couch for a nap and then, within a few minutes, I would be a witness to the third horror of the morning (if you count the breakfast as the first). It wouldn't be easy to stand by as Andrew's brains were splattered over the nearby wall in a shower of blood. But I'd know whether the brutal perpetrator was Bridget, Emma (Lizzie’s sister who was supposedly out of town but who conceivably could have returned), John Morse (a houseguest the night before and brother of the first Mrs. Borden), an intruder, or, indeed, Lizzie, who was found innocent of the crimes by a jury ten months later.

I would know, but I'd never tell.

Judson D. Hale, Sr., editor of Yankee magazine and The Old Farmer's Almanac.

Posted: Tue Jun 21, 2005 9:19 pm
by Kat
That's pretty cool, Allen, to stumble onto that!

Thanks for the transcription.

It sounds like a good topic Title, too:
"I Wish I'd Been There."
Stay To Tea.

Posted: Tue Aug 23, 2005 8:28 am
by Fargo
In the gallery section of this website there is the cover art which has a cover of Pearson's "Studies In Murder". Does anyone know which edition this is from? I don't judge a book from it's cover, but I do like a book with a picture on the cover and I would like to get an edition of this book that has that. I bought copy of "The Girl In The House Of Hate", it didn't have a picture on the cover like I expected it to. It is new and it came in shrinkwrap. I guess it must be a reprint but supprisingly there is no reprinting date in the book, only the original printing date of 1953. It does say that there are 300 copies to the printing though.