The Husband Poisoner by Tanya Bretherton - ISBN: 9780733642456
Paperback
Post-war Sydney: desperate women, deadly poison, and inconvenient husbands.

The Husband Poisoner

Suburban women who killed in post-World War II Sydney

$32.13

  • Paperback

    320 pages

  • Release Date

    23 February 2021

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Summary

After World War II, Sydney experienced a crime wave that was chillingly calculated. Discontent mixed with despair, greed with callous disregard. Women who had lost their wartime freedoms headed back into the kitchen with sinister intent and the household poison thallium, normally used to kill rats, was repurposed to kill husbands and other inconvenient family members.

Yvonne Fletcher disposed of two husbands. Caroline Grills cheerfully poisoned her stepmother, a family friend, her bro…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780733642456
ISBN-10:0733642454
Author:Tanya Bretherton
Publisher:Hachette Australia
Imprint:Hachette Australia
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:320
Release Date:23 February 2021
Weight:400g
Dimensions:232mm x 154mm x 26mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

True crime and family drama collide in these shocking real-life stories– NATIONAL [PRINT], Law Society Journal, [AUDIENCE: 26,736, ASR: AUD 363]

For readers of compelling history and true crime, from a critically acclaimed and awardwinning author, comes shocking real-life stories of murderous women who used rat poison to rid themselves of husbands and other family members.–VIC [PRINT], Shepparton Country News, [AUDIENCE: 32,453, ASR: AUD 802.5]
The Husband Poisoner is a social history of Sydney from 1947 to the mid-1960s. It will give the reader a detailed understanding of the state of Sydney society at the end of the Second World War.–Michael McKernan, NSW, ACT [PRINT], Canberra Times, Toowoomba Chronicle (News Corp syndicate) [AUDIENCE: 39,748, ASR:
What makes the book so worthwhile is not the gruesome “true crime” details of the deaths but how deeply rooted they were in the issues of domestic labour exploitation.–Miles Kemp, SA [PRINT], Adelaide Advertiser, [AUDIENCE: 149,005, ASR: AUD 287]
[…] a lively, sometimes novelistic study.–Steven Carroll, VIC + NSW [PRINT], The Saturday Age, Sydney Morning Herald [AUDIENCE: 386,260, ASR: AUD 22,969]
[…] The Husband Poisoner manages to be an entertaining read because the crimes themselves are so utterly compelling.–Gideon Haigh, NATIONAL [PRINT], Weekend Australian, [AUDIENCE: 219,242, ASR: AUD 52,798]
Bretherton is an excellent story teller. Indeed, this book reads like good crime fiction with dialogue deployed to push the stories forward. From Yvonne Fletcher’s disposal of two husbands to Caroline Grills and her four victims, the women are vivid. You can see their desperation, their motivation, their living conditions, their terrible taste in fashion and their wickedness.–[ONLINE] The Conversation
For lovers of true crime, this is a fascinating read.–NATIONAL [PRINT], The Weekly Times, [AUDIENCE: 50,808 ASR: AUD 1,823]
She brilliantly builds a complete picture of society at the time using her thorough social research. This book is Bretherton at her best.–@MERCSBOOKNOOK, NSW [PRINT], The Daily Telegraph, [AUDIENCE: 221,641, ASR: AUD 3,968]
The shocking true stories of women who used rat poison to rid themselves of their husbands and unwanted family members in Sydney in the 1940s.–NATIONAL [PRINT], Who Weekly, [AUDIENCE: 82,789, ASR: AUD 13,699]
True crime and family drama collide in these shocking real-life stories–NATIONAL [PRINT], Law Society Journal, [AUDIENCE: 26,736, ASR: AUD 363]

About The Author

Tanya Bretherton

Tanya Bretherton has a PhD in sociology with special interests in narrative life history and social history. She has published in the academic and public sphere for twenty years, and worked as a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Sydney for fifteen years. Dr Bretherton’s specialty is converting detailed research into thought-provoking works which are accessible to a general readership. Currently she works as a freelance researcher and writer.

Her first book, The Suitcase Baby, was shortlisted for the Ned Kelly Award, the Danger Prize and the Waverley Library ‘Nib’ Award. Her second book The Suicide Bride, was shortlisted for the Danger Prize and in 2020 she won the Danger Prize for The Killing Streets.

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