
Start the Week Reading and storytelling
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Mar 2, 2026 Sarah Dillon, Cambridge literature professor who studies how stories shape public reasoning. Lottie Moggach, novelist and arts writer who mined Victorian crime for Mrs Pearcey. Margaret Busby, pioneering publisher and editor who champions marginalized writers. They explore Victorian true crime and reading culture, how serials and moral panics shaped tastes, publishing risks and literary hierarchies, and how stories even influence scientists' thinking.
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Childhood Near A Victorian Murder Site
- Lottie Moggach grew up opposite Mary Pearcey's house after her grandmother had it 'exorcised' when told the murder story.
- The 1890 Camden murders became a Victorian spectacle: Pearcey's pram and toffee were displayed in Madame Tussauds, drawing 30,000 visitors in a day.
Why True Crime Appeals To Women
- True crime attracts many women partly because it offers a way to process safety anxieties and learn about threats through stories.
- Lottie frames domestic true crime as relationship drama, explaining women's interest as curiosity about relationships gone wrong.
How Alison and Busby Launched With A Rejected Novel
- Margaret Busby and Clive Allison started Alison and Busby in 1967 to publish cheap paperback poetry and later Sam Greenlee's novel after many rejections.
- Their first full-time title The Spook Who Sat By The Door got wide reviews and a film adaptation despite early industry resistance.











