
New Books in History Susannah Wilson, "A Most Quiet Murder: Maternity, Affliction, and Violence in Late Nineteenth-Century France" (Cornell UP, 2025)
Jan 24, 2026
Susannah Wilson, Associate Professor of French Studies and author of A Most Quiet Murder, explores a late 19th-century French child death through archives and medical records. She traces an abduction, a troubled woman’s reputation, morphine use and suspected simulated illness. The conversation probes courtroom reporting, gendered moral panic, and how psychiatric expertise shaped public judgment.
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The Child Victim And Her Abduction
- Henriette Barbet, a five-year-old schoolgirl, was lured from her maternalle and later found dead on the Canal de Bourgogne.
- Two child witnesses and a 14-year-old identified the woman who led her away as a tobacco-factory employee.
Fiquet's Troubled Background
- Marie-Françoise Fiquet emerged from a chaotic working-class life with early pregnancies and a turbulent reputation.
- Neighbors accused her of theft, poisoning, and sexual licentiousness, which shaped the investigation's portrayal.
Medical Seeking As A Pattern
- Fiquet repeatedly sought hospitals and medical attention, gaining a reputation as a simulator who feigned illnesses to access care.
- Susannah Wilson links this behavior to emerging psychiatric categories of factitious disorders and simulation.

