Apologies to the Cat's Meat Man: A Novel of Annie Chapman, the Second Victim of Jack the Ripper Audiolibro Por Alan M. Clark arte de portada

Apologies to the Cat's Meat Man: A Novel of Annie Chapman, the Second Victim of Jack the Ripper

Jack the Ripper Victims Series

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Apologies to the Cat's Meat Man: A Novel of Annie Chapman, the Second Victim of Jack the Ripper

De: Alan M. Clark
Narrado por: Alicia Rose
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This novel is part of the Jack the Ripper Victims Series. Each novel in the series is a stand-alone story.

Annie Chapman led a hard, lower class life in filthy 19th century London. Late in life, circumstances and her choices led her to earn her crust by solicitation. After a bruising brawl with another woman over money and a man, she lost her lodgings and found herself sleeping rough. That dangerous turn of events delivered her into the hands of London's most notorious serial killer, Jack the Ripper.

Contrasting her last week alive with the experiences of her earlier life, the author helps listeners understand how she might have made the decisions that put her in the wrong place at the wrong time.

©2017 Alan M. Clark (P)2017 Alan M. Clark
Ficción y Crimen Horror Suspenso Aterrador Ficción Inglaterra
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Lo que los oyentes dicen sobre Apologies to the Cat's Meat Man: A Novel of Annie Chapman, the Second Victim of Jack the Ripper

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  • Total
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Foray into 19th century London

Another delightful foray into 1800s London with Alan Clark and Jack the Ripper. Clark is one of my favorite writers, I have read many of his books and this is a third of his Ripper victim series I have completed. Clark does in this book what he did so well in his previous stories about Elizabeth Stride and Polly Nichols, he provides humanity to Annie Chapman, Jack The Ripper’s second victim. After reading three of the books in this series, some overarching themes emerge. The most remarkable is the harsh environment and atmosphere these women survived in as impoverished vagrants of 19th century London.

Annie Chapman is her own woman although she will meet the same obvious fate as others. You already know how this book is going to end which for me always seemed like the challenge for Clark who has to rely on his storytelling skills to keep you interested despite the foregone conclusion. Clark is someone who definitely can meet that challenge. The story starts off with Chapman finding herself put on the streets after being attacked by an adversarial neighbor in the building she was scraping by in. Once out on the street, the story follows Annie as she tries to survive while “sleeping rough” and you begin to learn some of her history and how she ended up in this desolate state. The story is dramatic and unforgiving like many of Clark’s stories are, but he does such a compelling job of exploring the humility and desperation of survival you can’t help but sympathize with Annie.


I definitely recommend this book if you have been reading this series. Although, I think Say Anything But Your Prayers is still my favorite of the series, Cats Meat Man is a great read. I still have not gotten to Of Thimble and Thread which I believe is the only book in the series out that I haven’t completed. I will rectify that eventually. I also hope Clark writes some more new non Ripper related books soon.

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Murder Is the End of Her Story…

There are a few things that have always made me stop and take notice: Sherlock Holmes, vampires, New Orleans, and Jack the Ripper. When in London, in 1999, for just a day, the must do things were the bookstores on Charing Cross Road, dinner at The Hard Rock Café and the Jack the Ripper Tour. One might even say that I am obsessive about these favorite things.

The narrator of APOLOGIES TO THE CATS MEAT MAN, Alicia Rose, is excellent. Her British accent sets the mood while the words remain clear and unambiguous.

As a general rule, I enjoy audio books once I have read the paper or ebook; I find that knowing the story helps me follow the narration better. This is an experiment in listening without having first read the book, and I would say that as experiments go, this was a rousing success.

I have long admired Alan M. Clarke as an artist, and now I can say that his writing matches or exceeds his art. He makes it perfectly clear at the outset that APOLOGIES TO THE CATS MEAT MAN is not another tale of Saucy Jack. It is a totally believable fictional biography of Jack's second victim, Annie Chapman. Her story will never be fully known, after all, she was a poor woman and no one would have thought her worthy of a biography. The tale Clarke weaves is totally believable to anyone who has even a passing acquaintance with Victorian era England. We know for a fact that she was poor, married to John Chapman, had children, drank too much, and was murdered. None of this is in dispute; however, no one is just what is available in the public record.

This is Dark Annie's narrative where Jack the Ripper is a mere cameo at the end.

APOLOGIES TO THE CATS MEAT MAN is the fourth book in the Jack the Ripper Victims series. It is not a series that needs to be read in order, so I am now looking forward to reading or listening to the other books in this series.

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