A woman was starved to death in her own home - surrounded by people who chose not to stop it.
In Victorian England, Harriet Staunton died slowly from starvation while living under the control of her husband and his family. There were no blows, no weapons, and no single moment of violence - only confinement, deprivation, and sustained neglect.
The Penge Murder reconstructs Harriet’s life, inheritance, marriage, and death using contemporary records, inquest evidence, and medical understanding of the period. It examines how domestic authority, gendered assumptions, and collective silence allowed an ordinary household to commit an extraordinary crime - and how the law ultimately failed to deliver justice equal to her suffering.
This is a disturbing but necessary true story, told with restraint, empathy, and historical care. Harriet Staunton was forgotten once. This book ensures she is not forgotten again.