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Disordered Minds
'When people are frightened, there's always a presumption of
guilt if your face doesn't fit...'
In 1970 Howard Stamp, a retarded twenty-year-old, was convicted on disputed
evidence of brutally murdering his grandmother in her Dorset home. Less
than three years later he was dead, driven to suicide by self-hatred and
relentless bullying by other prisoners. A fate befitting a murderer, perhaps,
but what if he were innocent?
When 34-year-old anthropologist Dr Jonathan Hughes re-examines Stamp's
case for a book on injustice, his research into the written evidence leads
him to believe that Stamp was wrongly convicted. But is the forgotten
story of one friendless young man compelling enough to persuade Jonathan
to confront the real murderer?
One person believes it is. George Gardener, 60, has been trying to bring
Stamp's case to public attention for years and has unearthed new evidence
that might exonerate him. But Gardener needs the young academic on board
if it is to be used to maximum effect.
On the face of it, there is no similarity between the illiterate Stamp
and the highly educated Hughes, yet their lives resonate through their
damaged childhoods and their mutual sense of exclusion. With the threat
of war in Iraq dominating British hearts and minds, there begins a battle
closer to home: an attempt to prove a grotesque miscarriage of justice.
But if a dangerous killer is still at large...
... then Gardener must first help Jonathan defeat his own demons...
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