What if the perfect alibi turned out to be the most suspicious detail of all?
In 1931, Julia Wallace was found brutally murdered inside her own home in Liverpool. The front door was locked. The neighbors heard nothing. And the only person with any apparent motive-her husband, William Herbert Wallace-had an ironclad alibi. Or did he?
The Unsolved Murder of Julia Wallace takes readers deep inside one of the most confounding and debated cases in British history-a case so strange it was called "the impossible murder" by Raymond Chandler and legal scholars alike. Through immersive storytelling, forensic insight, and meticulous historical research, this book reopens a mystery that has baffled detectives, judges, and the public for nearly a century.
Inside, you will uncover:
A minute-by-minute reconstruction of the night Julia Wallace was killed, including the infamous "Qualtrough call" that lured William Wallace away from the house-an address that didn't exist and a man who was never found.
An immersive portrait of 1930s Liverpool, a city shrouded in fog, secrets, and suspicion. From Anfield's working-class streets to the silent halls of Wolverton Street, every detail draws you into a world where trust could be fatal.
The contradictions of Wallace's trial and appeal, including the historic reversal of his murder conviction-an event that changed the course of English legal history and raised new questions about guilt, bias, and due process.
The mysterious figure of Richard Gordon Perry, a former coworker of Wallace's with a questionable alibi, explosive behavior, and rumors of a hidden motive that never made it into the courtroom.
A psychological dive into Julia Wallace herself, a woman erased by headlines, portrayed as a frail recluse-but who may have held secrets that contributed to the storm that took her life.
Forensic limitations of the 1930s, when blood pattern analysis and time-of-death estimates were more guesswork than science, and when a misplaced coat could be the linchpin of a conviction-or an elaborate red herring.
Modern reinvestigations by historians and true crime experts, using contemporary logic, criminal profiling, and digital archives to ask: could this case finally be solved with today's tools?
Julia Wallace wasn't a famous heiress. She wasn't a spy. She didn't vanish without a trace.
But her death, behind a locked door, became one of the most notorious locked room murders of all time-and her story continues to haunt the streets of Liverpool, whispering with every new theory, every lingering doubt, every name that was never brought to justice.
True crime stories grounded in both legal drama and emotional truth, where the victim's voice is not lost beneath the spectacle.
Historical cases that remain unsolved, but are rich with forensic mystery, psychological depth, and social consequence.
Courtroom tension and investigative breakdowns, including rare examples of wrongful conviction reversals in British law.
A deep dive into a city's culture, its press, and the prejudices that shaped one man's downfall-and perhaps protected another's escape.
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The Poisoner's Handbook by Deborah Blum
Black Dahlia, Red Rose by Piu Eatwell
The Anatomy of a Murder by Robert Traver
Some murders fade with time.
This one grows stranger the closer you look.