Dorothy Sayers called William Roughead "the best showman who ever stood
before the door of the chamber of horrors," and his true crime stories,
written in the early 1900s, are among the glories of the genre.
Displaying a meticulous command of evidence and unerring dramatic flair,
Roughead brings to life some of the most notorious crimes and
extraordinary trials of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century England and
Scotland. Utterly engrossing, these accounts of pre-meditated mayhem and
miscarried justice also cast a powerful light on the evil that human
beings, and human institutions, find both tempting to contemplate and
all too easy to do.