In 1893, two years after the last Ripper murder, Detective Inspector William Race met with two journalists working for The Sun and told them that he knew the identity of Jack the Ripper.
Rarely is a factual book such a page turner\' - TV presenter Nick Knowles. \'It is one of the volumes every Ripperologist should have on their bookshelf\' - Paul Begg, Reviews Editor for the Ripperologist magazine \'A watertight case.
This is a fresh, exciting detective and whodunnit story that whips along at a cracking pace.
In The Man Who Would Be Jack , the author re-examines Inspector Race\'s and the journalists\' findings and uncovers startling new evidence to support the idea that Cutbush was indeed Jack the Ripper.
When they published their results they caused a sensation, leading to the now infamous and deeply flawed Macnaghten Memoranda.
His actions unleashed the biggest journalistic investigation of the time with The Sun putting its star reporters on the trail of Thomas Cutbush.
Ignored by his superiors the Inspector eventually decided to take his story to the press.
Having worked on the Ripper case, Race noted a number of startling facts: Cutbush matched eyewitness descriptions of the Ripper; took long night-time walks, returning at dawn with mud and blood on his clothing, and once tried to cut his mother\'s throat.
Two years earlier, Race had arrested 25-year-old Thomas Hayne Cutbush for attacking two young girls with a knife. In 1893, two years after the last Ripper murder, Detective Inspector William Race met with two journalists working for The Sun and told them that he knew the identity of Jack the Ripper