The Most Extraordinary Trial of William Palmer


Lu par Lynne T

(4.2 stars; 24 reviews)

John Parsons Cook was a 28 year old bachelor, from a good family but not in robust health. He studied to become a lawyer, but instead of following that career, turned to raising race horses. In November 1855, during a visit to the Shrewsbury races, he was taken violently ill. He was attended by the 80 year old local doctor Dr. Bamford, and Cook's friend and sometimes partner, Dr. Palmer.
William Palmer was a physician and surgeon, a widower and father. His appearance instilled confidence and invited trust. But were appearances deceptive? Was he, in fact, a cool, calculating and vicious serial murderer, who used his knowledge and skill for evil ends, to escape the effects of an addiction that was destroying his life? There are numerous references to this case in fiction, by Dickens, Sayers, Hitchcock and others; and the familiar salutation "What's your poison?" is believed to date from the events of this case. This is true courtroom drama, more gripping than fiction and it will have you guessing until the end.( Lynne Thompson) (15 hr 13 min)

Chapitres

Introduction 7:14 Lu par Lynne T
Central Criminal Court, May, 14, 1856 Part 1 45:44 Lu par Lynne T
Central Criminal Court, May, 14, 1856 Part 2 38:26 Lu par Lynne T
Central Criminal Court, May, 14, 1856 Part 3 33:30 Lu par Lynne T
Second Day, May 15 58:11 Lu par Lynne T
Third Day, May 16 34:41 Lu par Lynne T
Third Day, May 16 Part 2 30:19 Lu par Lynne T
Fourth Day, May 17 40:25 Lu par Lynne T
Fourth Day, May 17 Part 2 31:04 Lu par Lynne T
Fifth Day, May 19 52:02 Lu par Lynne T
Fifth Day, May 19 Part 2 11:03 Lu par Lynne T
Sixth Day, May 20 42:12 Lu par Lynne T
Seventh Day, May 21 7:12 Lu par Lynne T
The Defence (Seventh Day Continued) 1:00:12 Lu par Lynne T
The Defence (Seventh Day Continued) Part 2 59:07 Lu par Lynne T
The Defence (Seventh Day Continued) Part 3 45:29 Lu par Lynne T
Eighth Day, May 22 49:02 Lu par Lynne T
Eighth Day, May 22 Part 2 17:26 Lu par Lynne T
Ninth Day, May 23 55:19 Lu par Lynne T
Tenth Day, May 24 44:09 Lu par Lynne T
Tenth Day, May 24 Part 2 43:02 Lu par Lynne T
Tenth Day, May 24th Part 3 32:02 Lu par Lynne T
Eleventh Day, May 26 56:44 Lu par Lynne T
Twelfth Day, May 27 18:56 Lu par Lynne T

Critiques

Interesting experience: murder mystery as transcript


(4 stars)

This must be an actual transcript for a murder trial. Imagine...this is exactly how the mystery unfolded for the jurors- complete with swaths of boredom here and there, interspersed with shocking revelations. Listening to this, I got to weigh the evidence, evaluate the witnesses, and decide which side made the stronger case. And learn more than I ever wanted to know about tetanus.

Is it time for your tetanus shot?


(5 stars)

This is a newspaper transcript of the murder trial of Dr. William Palmer in 1855 England. The trial took an act of Parliament for a change of venue, dozens of competing medical opinions, and 12 days of testimony. The jury returned with a verdict after an hour and a half. It's Fascinating!

Outstanding!


(5 stars)

Very different. It's not a story, but a real trial. You are part of the jury hearing things for the first time. I kept changing my mind on the verdict. You really dont know how it will end until the very, very end. I couldn't put it down! The reader was beyond excellent, too!

historical courtroom drama


(5 stars)

most interesting. feels like you are there in the court. well read. I agree with the proceeding review; this strikes me as actual trial minutes reading very informative on the subject of tetanus. fascinating to realize how far our current medical knowledge has advanced.

Boring!!!


(3 stars)

This was very well read, but the endless repetition of the witnesses & legal summing up, was so long winded...I was bored to tears! A condensed version is required.