End of Innocence: The Untold Stories Behind the Victims of Child Killer Robert Black
By (Author) Zo Apostolides
Ad Lib Publishers Ltd
Mardle Books
18th August 2022
18th August 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
364.1523092
Paperback
320
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
The first in a series of true crime books taking a fresh look at the victims, their families and the investigations behind unresolved, infamous cold cases
End of Innocence is the first in a non-fiction series ('Truly Unforgotten') exploring UK cold cases.
The book focuses on the 1978 disappearance of Genette Tate. The 13- year-old schoolgirl vanished while out delivering newspapers on her bicycle in the Exeter countryside; no trace of her was ever discovered.
With new and rarely seen comments from family, police and inside the courtroom, the story links her case to the earlier abductions of April Fabb (also 13), Christine Markham (9) and Mary Boyle (6). None of these unsolved cases was assumed to be linked until 1990, when a man was apprehended having just kidnapped a six-year-old girl. That man was Robert Black, a notorious murderer about whom relatively little has been written.
The majority of Blacks victims were working-class girls, whose parents lacked the resources to mount private investigations. Genettes disappearance was by far the most publicised, and the book uses dramatic, fictionalised descriptions based on facts and interviews to compare her case with the others. The book also spotlights the vast difference in police work/co-operation and note-sharing in the 60s and 70s.
When Black was eventually caught, he was charged with four murders and sentenced to life, though the true number of his victims was very likely far higher. Police were preparing to charge Black with Genette Tates abduction and murder when he died in prison in 2016.
'An intriguing and informative read.'
* Joy Kluver, author of Last Seen, Broken Girls, Left for Dead *'An interesting and well put together dossier.'
* Blogger JAFFA READS TOO *Zo Apostolides has worked as a journalist for 10 years covering lifestyle, literature, art and education for theFinancial Times, The Guardian,The Telegraphand others. She has ghost-written several memoirs and biographies and combines this with editorial work as a literary agent with a particular interest in crime, horror and narrative non-fiction across all genres.