The vanishing triangle The murdered women Ireland forgot

Claire McGowan

Book - 2022

"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 McGowan reveals an Ireland not of leprechauns an...d craic but of outdated social and sexual mores, where women and their bodies were of secondary importance to perceived propriety and misguided politics--a place of well-buttoned lips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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Subjects
Genres
True crime stories
Published
New York : Little A [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Claire McGowan (author)
Physical Description
173 pages : map ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781542035293
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In the 1990s, Ireland was deep into the third decade of the Troubles when something else began. Irish writer McGowan (What You Did, 2019) here chronicles the previously untold and largely unsolved murders of eight women in the area around Dublin known as the Vanishing Triangle. Close in age to the victims, and as a writer of crime fiction, McGowan feels a connection to this part of her country's history. She dives deep into the political, police, and social constructs that could have contributed to the lack of guilty parties, and believes that it was all of those cultural pieces that aided in the killer's (or killers') ability to abduct women in broad daylight and remain hidden for so long. McGowan lends her novelist's voice to this nonfiction tale, giving readers revealing access into her mind as a writer and allowing us to sit in on the absurd lack of follow-through on the part of the Irish Gardai (police). McGowan writes for the justice of the lost and murdered women and for change in Ireland.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A writer born in Northern Ireland examines the stories of women who disappeared without a trace in 1990s Ireland. Between 1993 and 1998, eight women disappeared 80 miles outside Dublin in a "safe and welcoming country where bad things don't really happen." Exploring these disappearances, all of which took place during the author's adolescence in Northern Ireland, McGowan recalls that no one ever discussed these missing person cases. She only stumbled upon them when she was doing research for her own crime fiction almost two decades later. In 2000, when a 24-year-old woman was found murdered near Dublin "in a populated area and in broad daylight," McGowan felt compelled to investigate crimes that occurred years before. She discovered the women were a heterogenous group with no connection to each other. Yet those she talked to about them almost invariably asked if they were involved in sex work. "Think about what it means, that question--that we expect a certain type of woman to go missing, to be murdered," she writes." While police had worked on the cases for three years, the author discovered that in one case, it took them three days to start looking for the missing woman. She also learned that one woman who had barely escaped from a brutal rape and attempted murder in Dublin's "vanishing triangle" saw her attacker, a husband and father others considered "a decent man," released from prison five years before the end of his sentence. McGowan surmises that the "savagery and speed" of the ambush suggested a man who knew what he was doing. Yet he was never investigated further for possible connection to the eight disappearances. Readable and thought-provoking, this book reveals that despite efforts at modernization and liberalization, Irish systems of justice and power remain as patriarchal as they are complicit in maintaining a centuries-old culture of silence, suppression, and misogyny. A chilling book of true crime featuring important social issue concerns. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.