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Selected Letters (Paperback)
Paul Willetts, Julian Maclaren-Ross
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Julian Maclaren-Ross, well known in his own lifetime and unfairly
neglected after it, is now getting the attention he deserves. None
of his letters have ever been published, and this collection comes
out of extensive research and selection by Paul Willetts,
Maclaren-Ross's biographer, the authority on the writer.
"North Soho 999" is a surprisingly topical non-fiction account of
the murder that came to symbolise the crimewave threatening to
overwhelm post-war London. Set in bomb-scarred London in 1947, it
is the untold story of a Soho robbery and shooting carried out by a
17 year-old and his two young accomplices. The crime sparked
worldwide press coverage and was associated with a single, potent
image; a photograph of the dying man stretched across the pavement.
Much of the press reaction at the time focused on the breakdown of
law and order, rising youth crime, the spread of illegal firearms
and the deterrent value of capital punishment - concerns that are
frequently echoed today. "North Soho 999" concentrates on the hunt
for the killers and the subsequent trial, with Willetts'
approaching the story very much as Truman Capote did in his
classic, "In Cold Blood". One of this country's biggest and most
extraordinary murder-hunts, it brought together the pioneering
forensic pathologist, Sir Bernard Spilsbury; the hangman, Albert
Pierrepoint; the crusading journalist, Duncan Webb; and the
Scotland Yard detective, Bob Fabian whose dazzling detective work
led to the creation of "Fabian of the Yard", the world's first hit
television cop show. It also led to a major appeal by "The Daily
Mail" on behalf of the murder victim's family, questions in
Parliament and the making of the film, "The Blue Lamp", a huge box
office success starring Dirk Bogarde. Paul Willettts' last book,
"Fear and Loathing in Fitzrovia", the biography of Julian
Maclaren-Ross, received wide critical acclaim and was selected as a
'Book of the Year' by several national newspapers. Paul Willetts
lives in Norwich.
Since the first publication of 'Fear and Loathing in Fitzrovia' in
2003 there has been a resurgence of interest in his ground-breaking
work and flamboyant personality. Synonymous though he is with Soho,
his uniquely strange life included spells in the army and on the
French Riviera. So chaotic was his existence that he makes Jack
Kerouac and Charles Bukowski appear models of stability and
self-restraint. During fifty-two hectic years Maclaren-Ross endured
alchoholism, drug-induced psychosis, poverty, homelessness,
imprisonment, near insanity and a Scotland Yard man-hunt. At one
stage he even stalked and planned to murder George Orwell's
glamorous widow. 'Fear and Loathing in Fitzrovia' provides a
vibrant and justly acclaimed portrait of Maclaren-Ross and the
world he inhabited.
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