Dark London: A Journey Through the City's Mysterious and Macabre Underworld
By (Author) Dr. Drew Gray
Quarto Publishing PLC
Frances Lincoln
16th September 2025
4th September 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Crime and criminology
History: plagues, diseases, famines
Hardback
192
Width 160mm, Height 210mm
750g
From dark crimes of passion to shocking tales of grave robbing,gruesome murders, dens of iniquity, Victorian seances andhaunted graveyards - not far beneath London's everday bustleand glitter there has long been a fascinatingly rich underworld ofcriminality, superstition, scandal and macabre debauchery.Explore this rich seam of morbid history, case-by-case, with socialhistorian Dr Drew Gray, a specialist in the history of crime andpunishment. Who were 'The London Burkers', for example, whoseringleader confessed to stealing and selling nearly 1,000 dead bodiesto keen 1830s anatomists Why were so many opium dens locatedin Limehouse, and how did they become so emblematic of the city'sdebauched side And why was there so much public panic aboutcrime in Victorian London, and how did the city's notoriously roughprisons, courts, workhouses and houses of correction deal with itsperpetratorsDark London brings together the history of the city's seamier side, picking out the most scandalous, curious and bizarre aspects toportray London's shadowy and fascinating underbelly.
Dr. Drew Gray is a social historian of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries who specialises in the history of crime and punishment. Drew is Head of Subject for Culture (Humanities, Media, & Performance) at the University of Northampton and teaches modules on both the History and Criminology programmes. His previous works include Murder Maps: Crime Scenes Revisited; Phrenology to Fringerprint 1811-1911 and London's Shadows: The Dark Side of the Victorian City.