Description

Book Synopsis

'Was rich Mrs Gertrude Hullett murdered at her luxurious 15-room home on Beachy Head? Detectives are tonight trying to establish the cause of the 50-year-old widow's sudden death . . . ' Daily Mail, 1957

In July 1957, the press descended in droves on the south-coast town of Eastbourne. An inquest had just been opened into the suspicious circumstances surrounding the death of Mrs Bobbie Hullett. She died after months of apparent barbiturate abuse - the drugs prescribed to calm her nerves by her close friend and doctor, Dr John Bodkin Adams.

The inquest brought to the surface years of whispered suspicion that had swept through the tea rooms, shops and nursing homes of the town. The doctor's alarming influence over the lives, deaths and finances of wealthy widows had not gone unnoticed - it was rumoured that the family doctor had been on a killing spree that spanned decades and involved 300 suspicious cases. Superintendent Hannam of Scotland Yard was called in to investigate.

The Curious Habits of Dr Adams brilliantly brings to life the atmosphere of post-war England, and uses a wealth of new documents to follow the twists and turns of an extraordinary Scotland Yard murder enquiry. As expertly crafted as the best period detective novel, this book casts an entertainingly chilling light on a man reputed to be one of England's most prolific serial killers.



Trade Review
Jane Robins has written an endlessly enjoyable book, which reads like an Agatha Christie -- Craig Brown * Mail on Sunday *
She tells the story with great brio, and a real feeling for the vanished social milieu in which Adams operated -- Lynn Barber * Sunday Times *
The case against Adams as a serial killer is a classic of British crime, but Jane Robins takes nothing for granted. She re-examines the evidence, consults modern experts (some of whom worked on the enquiry into the activities of Dr Harold Shipman) and presents her own perturbing conclusions. On the basis of this book, would you have convicted the curiously behaved Dr Adams? * Saga *
Vividly characterised, wonderfully atmospheric and thoroughly riveting * Daily Mail *
This is a compelling, very well-written story. It will feed the British love of a good murder mystery. Robins gives her own verdict in the final chapter but her readers are the jury * Scotsman *
One to keep you alert on the beach * Observer *
A compelling account of a murder mystery * Oldie *
Vividly characterised, wonderfully atmospheric and thoroughly gripping * Evening Standard Book of the Year *
A gripping tale that bears an uncanny resemblance to the case of Harold Shipman * Sunday Telegraph *

The Curious Habits of Dr Adams: A 1950s Murder

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 17 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Jane Robins

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      View other formats and editions of The Curious Habits of Dr Adams: A 1950s Murder by Jane Robins

      Publisher: John Murray Press
      Publication Date: 12/09/2013
      ISBN13: 9781848544727, 978-1848544727
      ISBN10: 1848544723

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      'Was rich Mrs Gertrude Hullett murdered at her luxurious 15-room home on Beachy Head? Detectives are tonight trying to establish the cause of the 50-year-old widow's sudden death . . . ' Daily Mail, 1957

      In July 1957, the press descended in droves on the south-coast town of Eastbourne. An inquest had just been opened into the suspicious circumstances surrounding the death of Mrs Bobbie Hullett. She died after months of apparent barbiturate abuse - the drugs prescribed to calm her nerves by her close friend and doctor, Dr John Bodkin Adams.

      The inquest brought to the surface years of whispered suspicion that had swept through the tea rooms, shops and nursing homes of the town. The doctor's alarming influence over the lives, deaths and finances of wealthy widows had not gone unnoticed - it was rumoured that the family doctor had been on a killing spree that spanned decades and involved 300 suspicious cases. Superintendent Hannam of Scotland Yard was called in to investigate.

      The Curious Habits of Dr Adams brilliantly brings to life the atmosphere of post-war England, and uses a wealth of new documents to follow the twists and turns of an extraordinary Scotland Yard murder enquiry. As expertly crafted as the best period detective novel, this book casts an entertainingly chilling light on a man reputed to be one of England's most prolific serial killers.



      Trade Review
      Jane Robins has written an endlessly enjoyable book, which reads like an Agatha Christie -- Craig Brown * Mail on Sunday *
      She tells the story with great brio, and a real feeling for the vanished social milieu in which Adams operated -- Lynn Barber * Sunday Times *
      The case against Adams as a serial killer is a classic of British crime, but Jane Robins takes nothing for granted. She re-examines the evidence, consults modern experts (some of whom worked on the enquiry into the activities of Dr Harold Shipman) and presents her own perturbing conclusions. On the basis of this book, would you have convicted the curiously behaved Dr Adams? * Saga *
      Vividly characterised, wonderfully atmospheric and thoroughly riveting * Daily Mail *
      This is a compelling, very well-written story. It will feed the British love of a good murder mystery. Robins gives her own verdict in the final chapter but her readers are the jury * Scotsman *
      One to keep you alert on the beach * Observer *
      A compelling account of a murder mystery * Oldie *
      Vividly characterised, wonderfully atmospheric and thoroughly gripping * Evening Standard Book of the Year *
      A gripping tale that bears an uncanny resemblance to the case of Harold Shipman * Sunday Telegraph *

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