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Index
Cover
Title
Contents
Introduction
1 Not So Ordinary: The First Professional Crime Reporter
2 A Highwayman Came Riding: The Arrival of Celebrity Criminals
3 Killing Times: How Murder and the Noose Made the Front Pages
4 A Twist in the Tale: Charles Dickens, Crime Writer
5 From the Maiden to the Ripper: How Muckraker-general Changed Crime Reporting For Ever
6 From Bodysnatching to Bodysnatching: Crime Reporting North of the Border and the Man Who Couldn’t Have Enough of a Good Murder
7 From Brides in Baths to the Cleft Chin Murder: Crime Reporting During Wartime
8 Dope and Dopes: Reporting on Drugs from the High Priestess of Unholy Rites to Mr Nice
9 Fleet Street’s Murder Gang: Skid Marks That End in a Pool of Blood
10 ‘Mr Murder:’ The Man Who Brought Gore to the Airwaves and Screen
11 The Sultans of the Newsroom: From the Vice Man to the Prince of Darkness
12 Silent Men and Scapegoats: Looking at the Dock from the Other Side
13 Getting Away With Murder: Reporters and Criminals
14 Mind How You Go: Cops and Hacks
15 They Got the Wrong One: Trial and Redemption by the Media
16 True Crime: A Detective Takes Up the Tale
17 The House of Horrors and the Garden of Evil: The West Case and its Legacy for the Press
18 Crashing the Barriers: An Unsuitable Job for a Woman?
19 Femmes Fatales, Molls and Madams: The Woman in the Dock
20 They Made Their Excuses and Left: The Language of Crime Reporting
21 The Leveson Leviathan: How Hacking Damaged Hacks
22 Still the Best Job in the World? The End of an Era
23 The Crime Reporter in Space: What the Future Holds
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index
Copyright
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