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THE CASE OF THE MURDEROUS DR. CREAM by Dean Jobb

THE CASE OF THE MURDEROUS DR. CREAM

The Hunt for a Victorian Era Serial Killer

by Dean Jobb

Pub Date: July 13th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-61620-689-5
Publisher: Algonquin

A lively account of an early international serial killer’s crimes.

In his latest, journalist and creative nonfiction professor Jobb richly embellishes his grim central tale with carefully researched setting, detail, and social mores of the late Victorian era, elegantly contrasted with his eponymous fiend, Thomas Neill Cream (1852-1892), “a doctor from Canada” and “a new kind of killer, choosing victims at random and killing without remorse.” Many readers will make comparisons to H.H. Holmes from The Devil in the White City. However, writes Jobb, “by the time Holmes claimed his first victim in 1891, and long before the infamous Jack the Ripper terrorized London in 1888, Cream was suspected of killing as many as six people, most of them deliberately poisoned with tainted medicine.” Cream is an unsavory cipher, a foppish, dissolute sociopath masquerading behind the authority of a doctor. His well-to-do family perceived his dangerous tendencies, sending him to England after an 11-year prison sentence for poisoning his alleged mistress’s husband in small-town Illinois and following earlier killings in Canada and Chicago for which he’d evaded responsibility. Yet, once back in England, Cream continued his murderous ways, poisoning several prostitutes and sending blackmail letters impugning others for his crimes, a narcissistic tell that later provided evidence for his conviction. Though “the adventures of Holmes and Dr. Watson made detection look easy,” in reality, forensic detection was in its infancy. Jobb ably portrays the early investigators who used often derided scientific approaches to bring Cream to justice, including a Scotland Yard detective who traveled to America to piece together Cream’s past, “an investigation that would expose more crimes and furnish even more evidence of the doctor’s capacity for cruelty and murder.” Eventually, Cream was hanged following conviction in a highly publicized trial in London, leaving as his legacy dismay mingled with social reflection. “Four poisonings committed under Scotland Yard’s nose…suggested a shocking lack of vigilance.”

A vivid, engaging revival of a forgotten Victorian villain.