On November 3, 1870, on a San Francisco ferry, Laura Fair shot and killed her married lover, A. P. Crittenden. Throughout her two murder trials, Fair’s lawyers, supported by expert testimony from physicians, claimed that the shooting was the result of temporary insanity caused by a severely painful menstrual cycle. The first jury disregarded such testimony, choosing instead to focus on Fair’s disreputable character. In the second trial, however, an effective defense built on contemporary medical beliefs and gendered stereotypes led to a verdict that shocked Americans across the country. In this rousing history, Carole Haber probes changing ideas about morality and immorality, masculinity and femininity, love and marriage, health and disease, and mental illness to show that all these concepts were reinvented in the Victorian West.
Haber’s book examines the era’s most controversial issues, including suffrage, the gendered courts, women’s physiology, and free love. This notorious story enriches our understanding of Victorian society, opening the door to a discussion about the ways in which reputation—especially female reputation—is shaped.
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“In this absorbing account of a notorious San Francisco murder, Carole Haber probes the multiple versions of the female defendant created by prosecution and defense attorneys to explain why she shot her lover. Haber then goes beyond these competing ideas of gender to offer an ingenious explanation of the crime that has puzzled mystery lovers for well over a century.”
— Patricia Cline Cohen, University of California at Santa Barbara
“Mesmerizing…Haber’s captivating social history opens a window into Victorian America’s thinking about issues related to gender, women’s reputations, law, and religion.”
— Publishers Weekly“In her outstanding new book, Carole Haber examines Laura Fair’s murder case, as well as its lasting significance and continuing impact on the portrayal of women in the press and popular media. The scholarship is excellent and the read is thrilling.”
— Gordon Morris Bakken, California State University at FullertonBe the first to write a review about this audiobook!
Carole Haber, PhD, is professor of history and dean of the School of Liberal Arts at Tulane University. She is the author of Beyond Sixty-Five: The Dilemma of Old Age in America’s Past and the coauthor of Old Age and the Search for Security: An American Social History.
Pam Ward, an AudioFile Earphones Award–winning narrator, found her true calling reading books for the blind and physically handicapped for the Library of Congress’ Talking Books program. The fact that she can work with Blackstone Audio from the beauty of the mountains of Southern Oregon is an unexpected bonus.