A review by fyoosha
Hannah Mary Tabbs and the Disembodied Torso: A Tale of Race, Sex, and Violence in America by Kali Nicole Gross

4.0

This short book is a fascinating exploration of a murder investigation in 1887 Philadelphia. The crime itself is lurid and fascinating - a torso, just a torso, is discovered in a town just outside Philadelphia. The racial ambiguity of said torso led to a dedicated investigation determined to trace the torso's origin story, which led back to Hannah Mary Tabbs and a strange tale of adultery, extramarital sex, and passionate jealousy.

Gross explores this crime through the lends of late 19th-century America. That is, she provides context for the issues she explores. When introducing the detectives who would investigate this case, she gives a brief history of the police in Philadelphia. When introducing Hannah Mary Tabbs and explaining her upbringing, Gross delves into slavery in Maryland. She also talks about the politics of race and passing. It's also just a fascinating look at the criminal justice system in 1887 in general.

It's an intriguing exploration of an intriguing crime, and Gross walks us through it with aplomb. Rather than give away the game in her introduction, she walks us through the investigation step by step, so we are following it in nearly the same way those in 1887 would have been. I can easily see this being adapted into a historical miniseries, because it's all drama and intrigue.