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A Sentimental Murder: Love and Madness in the Eighteenth Century

 

By Farrar, Straus and Giroux
A Sentimental Murder: Love and Madness in the Eighteenth Century
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$22.74
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Last Seen $22.74   Last Seen $17.43   Last Seen $0.27  
Highest $27.00 Jan 20, '16   Highest $17.44 Aug 9, '15   Highest $7.46 Aug 20, '14  
Lowest $18.66 Apr 15, '14   Lowest $2.98 Aug 24, '14   Lowest $0.01 Jul 31, '15  
Average $25.72   Average $15.26   Average $1.20  
Added Apr 15, 2014   Added Apr 15, 2014   Added Apr 15, 2014  
                 
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank
30 day average: 2,280,568 | 90 day average: 1,889,597

 

Product Description
One April evening in 1779, Martha Ray, the pretty mistress of a famous aristocrat, was shot dead at point-blank range by a young clergyman who then attempted to take his own life. Instead he was arrested, tried and hanged. In this fascinating new book, John Brewer, a leading historian of eighteenth-century England, asks what this peculiar little story was all about. Then as now, crimes of passion were not uncommon, and the story had the hallmarks of a great scandal--yet fiction and fact mingled confusingly in all the accounts, and the case was hardly deemed appropriate material for real history. Was the crime about James Hackman's unrequited love for the virtuous mother of the Earl of Sandwich's illicit children? Or was Ray, too, deranged by passion, as a popular novel suggested? In Victorian times the romance became a morality tale about decadent Georgian aristocrats and the depravity of wanton women who consorted with them; by the 1920s Ray was considered a chaste mistress destroyed by male dominance and privilege. Brewer, in tracing Ray's fate through these protean changes in journalism, memoir, and melodrama, offers an unforgettable account of the relationships among the three protagonists and their different places in English society--and assesses the shifting balance between storytelling and fact, past and present that inheres in all history.

 

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