Marianne Vincent
4.5★s The Schoolgirl Strangler is the fourth book by Australian author, Katherine Kovacic. Four girls of school age murdered, over a span of five years from late 1930, in or near Melbourne, and the Victoria Police are baffled. There are suspects; inquests conclude “murder”; arrests are made; a man is put on trial; reputations are ruined; but the real perpetrator is not found. Until… Kovacic gathers together the information about each of the four cases from a myriad of sources and presents it to the reader in easily digestible form. Suspects, the actions of the police, the trial, the appeal, the execution of the death sentence, the accused man’s dialogue with the Inspector General of Prisons, and the Justice’s instructions to the jury are all thoroughly examined. Kovacic’s meticulous research is apparent on every page, but at no time does this make for a heavy read: the way the facts are fed into the narrative gives it the feel of a crime novel, never dry or dense; always interesting, moreso from the benefit of hindsight and modern psychiatric and psychological knowledge. The half-decade that Kovacic describes is so different from the modern day as to be incredible to younger readers: a dearth of telephones and other technology; the use of Indigenous trackers; longer travel times; suits as routine attire even during leisure activities; newspapers passed around between neighbours; no formal Legal Aid; and of course, no recourse to DNA or trace analysis. Many aspects of the condemned man’s behaviour are chilling, including: his clear lack of remorse; his smile at hearing of his death sentence; and his statement just before his execution “If I were to go out tomorrow it [murder] would happen again… The sooner I go through the drop the better.” The first two cases certainly present particular members of Victoria’s police force in the early 1930s in a less-than-favourable light: selecting a suspect, then ignoring any evidence that didn’t implicate him and failing to follow up any alibis he cited; dubious line-up practices; and trying to force a confession on circumstantial evidence. More than one miscarriage of justice is narrowly averted. While maps of the various locations mentioned in the text would have been an appreciated addition, this is otherwise a thoroughly gripping and fascinating look at a series of murders that shot fear into Victoria’s parents. This unbiased review is from a copy provided by Echo Publications.