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Stephen Knight (author)

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Occupation
  
Journalist

Subject
  
Crime

Language
  
English

Name
  
Stephen Knight

Nationality
  
English

Role
  
Journalist

Period
  
1976-1984


Stephen Knight (author) wwwcasebookorgimagesstephenknightjpg

Born
  
26 September 1951Hainault, Essex (
1951-09-26
)

Notable works
  
Jack the Ripper: The Final SolutionThe Brotherhood

Died
  
Awards
  
CWA Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction

Books
  
Jack the Ripper: The Final, The Brotherhood: The Secr, Form and ideology in crime ficti, Requiem at Rogano, The Killing of Justice Godfrey

Similar People
  
Jess Foley, Albert - Prince Consort, William IV of the United Ki, Mary of Teck

Stephen Knight (26 September 1951 – 25 July 1985) was an English journalist and author. He is best remembered for the books Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution (1976) and The Brotherhood (1984).

Contents

Life and works

Born in Hainault in Essex as Stephen Victor Knight, he attended West Hatch Technical High School, at nearby Chigwell. He was not successful academically, and after leaving school at 16 Knight went to work as a salesman for the London Electricity Board in Chigwell. At 18 he got a job as a reporter on the Ilford Pictorial before moving to the Hornchurch Echo.

His book Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution (1976) suggested that the Ripper murders were part of a conspiracy between Freemasons and the British Royal Family, a claim which is not accepted by historians. Nevertheless, the book became a bestseller, and was the inspiration for several works of fiction, among them the film Murder by Decree (1978) by Bob Clark and the graphic novel From Hell by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell.

The Brotherhood (1984) was published at a time when Freemasonry was coming under increasing scrutiny in the United Kingdom. Knight's last book before his death was The Killing of Justice Godfrey, exploring the death of Edmund Berry Godfrey in 1678, which had caused widespread anti-Catholic sentiment in England.

In 1983 he became a religious follower of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh and, as a part of this interest, took the name Swami Puja Debal. He began to experience epileptic seizures in 1977, and in 1980 was discovered to have a brain tumour while taking part in a documentary for the Horizon television series. The tumour was removed, but returned in 1984.

Stephen Knight died in July 1985 at the age of 33 while staying with friends at Carradale in Argyllshire. He was buried there.

Private life

In 1976 he married Margot Kenrick, who had two daughters, Natasha and Nicole, from a previous relationship. In the same year the couple had a daughter together, Nanouska Maria Knight. The couple later separated, and in November 1980 Knight announced that, when his divorce came through, he would marry Lesley Newson, a 28-year-old researcher on Horizon. However, instead the couple later also separated. His partner during his last years was Barbara Mary Land.

References

Stephen Knight (author) Wikipedia