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The Vanishing Triangle: The Murdered Women…
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The Vanishing Triangle: The Murdered Women Ireland Forgot (udgave 2022)

af Claire McGowan (Forfatter)

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingOmtaler
1044261,827 (3.66)4
Ireland in the 1990s seemed a safe place for women. With the news dominated by the Troubles, it was easy to ignore non-political murders and sexual violence, to trust that you weren't going to be dragged into the shadows and killed. But beneath the surface, a far darker reality had taken hold. Through questioning the society and circumstances that allowed eight young women to vanish without a trace--no conclusion or conviction, no resolution for their loved ones--bestselling crime novelist Claire McGowan delivers a candid investigation into the culture of secrecy, victim-blaming and shame that left these women's bodies unfound, their fates unknown, their assailants unpunished. McGowan reveals an Ireland not of leprechauns and craic but of outdated social and sexual mores, where women and their bodies were of secondary importance to perceived propriety and misguided politics--a place of well-buttoned lips and stony silence, inadequate police and paramilitary threat. Was an unknown serial killer at large or was there something even more insidious at work? In this insightful, sensitively drawn account, McGowan exposes a system that failed these eight women--and continues to fail women to this day.--… (mere)
Medlem:audramelissa
Titel:The Vanishing Triangle: The Murdered Women Ireland Forgot
Forfattere:Claire McGowan (Forfatter)
Info:Little A (2022), 186 pages
Samlinger:Dit bibliotek
Vurdering:
Nøgleord:Ingen

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The Vanishing Triangle af Claire McGowan

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True Crime Time


I typically read at least one or two true crime like stories a year I am glad this was on my arc stack this year even though it was hard to get through. This was very well researched and presented. McGowan focuses on several cases, comparing and contrasting their similarities and differences. She shows how attitudes toward women and their value can have various effects on solving crimes. Bringing in the influence of religion and politics, McGowan explores possibilities and in the end explains that no one knows why and how so many people go missing. I found the topic to be scary and disconcerting. After reading this I was left with a sense of frustration. Dark things happen in so many parts of the world and I honestly understand that, what I have a hard time with is the fact that the way the police is portrayed while we watch TV comes across abusive and lazy. Which makes me wonder if things are getting better or worse.

As you can see this book is extremely tough to read and thought provoking, which makes it worth your time. I can’t make this a 5 star read on the fact that it is a rough subject but I can say it was a solid 3 stars and worth your time
( )
  b00kdarling87 | Jan 7, 2024 |
The Vanishing Triangle by Claire McGowan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

#FirstLine ~ Prologue - Imagine this.

This book was heavy., but such a dynamic true crime story. It was written in truth and honor to the missing. It was well researched and shined a light on a system that failed in more ways than one. It is a story I did not know about and I am now glad that I now do. This book will stay with you long after you finish it. ( )
  Mrsmommybooknerd | May 26, 2022 |
Crime writer Claire McGowan has grown up in a small town in Northern Ireland which she always perceived as a safe place despite the Troubles. Of course, the news daily reported about bombings and people killed but what she hadn’t been aware of was the incredibly high number of girls and women who were abducted or simply vanished in both Northern and the Republic of Ireland. Some of the cases happened close to where she lived, happened to girls her age who roamed the same places when she did but she has never even heard of it. Only rarely was a suspect arrested and even more seldom convicted for rape or murder. How could the country have such a high number of women murdered and except for their families nobody seems to care?

I have enjoyed Claire McGowan’s crime novels for some years now, not only because the plots are suspenseful and complex, but also because she manages to capture the atmosphere of a place, to create a special mood that can only exist there. With her deep understanding for the people and the places they live and which shape their thinking and acting, I was curious to read her true crime investigation of femicides.

What her enquiry uncovers is not the Ireland that has attracted tourists and business for decades. It is a country that was shaped by the Catholic church and whose legislation was far behind other European countries in terms of women’s rights. With the Troubles, it was often safer not to have seen anything and, first and foremost, not to say anything, thus atrocious crimes could happen in broad daylight in front of everybody’s eyes. The deeper she digs the more cases she finds and can link to a small area, the so called “Vanishing Triangle”, where an astonishing number of woman have disappeared and whose cases remain unsolved.

McGowan tells the women’s stories, lists the evidence and also provides reasons why their bodies are still missing or why prime suspects still walk free. All this grants a look in the country’s state in the 1980s and 1990s – a lot has changed since, but still society and police often fail female victims today.

A read which is as interesting as it is disturbing. I really enjoy listening to true crime podcasts thus the topic attracted me immediately. What I really appreciated was that Claire McGowan did not take a neutral position towards her account but you can sense her anger and the incredulity with which she looks at her findings and which makes you wonder why not more people shout out because of this. ( )
  miss.mesmerized | Apr 15, 2022 |
Review of Advance reader’s Copy/Uncorrected Proof eBook

In 2018, as a young woman got off a bus in Carlow, someone snatched her, stuffed her into a car, and drove away. Eighteen years later, a similar attack occurred, but a witness with a mobile phone called the police, and the attacker was located. A bloodstained note revealed the location of the victim; however, the twenty-four-year-old woman was dead . . . raped, and strangled . . . she’d died within forty-five minutes of her abduction.

Sadly, these events weren’t unusual in Dublin, Ireland where between 1993 and 1998 eight women disappeared in an area some eighty miles surrounding Dublin . . . the “vanishing triangle” referred to in the title of this true crime publication.

Was a serial killer at work in Ireland in the 1990s? Why, when so many women vanished, were the Gardia unable to solve any of the cases, unable to locate the missing women, even years after they’d vanished?

=========

The author, who grew up in Northern Island, reveals how several women vanished, but no one in authority seemed to care. Cases went unsolved, often for years, until the discovery of a body. But, for many of the families, there are no answers, no bodies to bury, no person to hold accountable.

There are no answers for the families of the missing, but the author provides the socio-political context for those years, a time of social upheaval, a time when women had no access to contraceptives, when abortion was illegal, and when, according to the author, “homophobia and intolerance remained rife.”

The stories of so many women missing, with little or no effort to find them, make this a difficult book to read. It is dark and disturbing, especially when the reader realizes that, at its heart, the culture, the society, and the politics of the time are a large part of the problem. Blaming women for what happened to them is nothing less than an insidious excuse for a failure of due diligence, a failure to conduct proper investigations for the missing women. Justice for the missing, and for their families, requires a significant change in the manner of investigation.

The stories of these women are compelling; the book, thought-provoking. There is much here for readers to consider, much that will remain with them long after turning the final page.

Recommended.

I received a free copy of this eBook from Amazon Publishing UK, Little A and NetGalley
#TheVanishingTriangle #NetGalley ( )
  jfe16 | Apr 14, 2022 |
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Ireland in the 1990s seemed a safe place for women. With the news dominated by the Troubles, it was easy to ignore non-political murders and sexual violence, to trust that you weren't going to be dragged into the shadows and killed. But beneath the surface, a far darker reality had taken hold. Through questioning the society and circumstances that allowed eight young women to vanish without a trace--no conclusion or conviction, no resolution for their loved ones--bestselling crime novelist Claire McGowan delivers a candid investigation into the culture of secrecy, victim-blaming and shame that left these women's bodies unfound, their fates unknown, their assailants unpunished. McGowan reveals an Ireland not of leprechauns and craic but of outdated social and sexual mores, where women and their bodies were of secondary importance to perceived propriety and misguided politics--a place of well-buttoned lips and stony silence, inadequate police and paramilitary threat. Was an unknown serial killer at large or was there something even more insidious at work? In this insightful, sensitively drawn account, McGowan exposes a system that failed these eight women--and continues to fail women to this day.--

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