A number of factors drew me to this rarity. Pamela Hansford Johnson was an early object of Dylan Thomas's desire who ended up marrying Leicester-born novelist, politician and all-round egghead C P Snow. As Lady Snow PHJ attended the trial of Moors Murderers Brady and Hindley in April 1966. The following year she worked up her articles into this monograph.
It's an odd book. Her point is that Brady and Hindley were products of the so-called liberalisation of the Sixties. Brady became a monster, she argues, because an ineffectual state allowed him access to pornography and pornographic literature (by which she expressly means the works of the Marquis de Sade). She has a point - but 60 years on we carry much stronger pornography in our phones and devices and reading literature is a habit dying a slow and protracted death. Yes, there are serial killers with far greater tallies today - in 1967 there was only really Jack the Ripper and a few oddballs in America - but today's monster are mass killers who often also kill themselves and who are motivated by, of all things, puritanical religosity. The last serial killers for sex in the UK were the Wests, both out of the way before the Millennium.
Another thing PHJ didn't know was the true tally for Brady and Hindley. Hindley only admitted the murders of Keith Bennett and Pauline Reade in the Eighties. PHJ's sadism theory really relies in the horrific ordeal of poor Lesley Ann Downey, which I still remember hearing about as a ten year-old. All five murders were ghastly and unforgivable but only Lesley Ann was degraded to that extent. Could it just be, in fact, that Brady was simply a monster who found himself the perfect ally in Myra Hindley?
On Iniquity is very well written and a fascinating sociological snapshot of its era.









