The Sinners All Bow: Two Authors, One Murder, and the Real Hester Prynne

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One of Amazon’s Best History Books of January

Acclaimed journalist, podcaster, and true-crime historian Kate Winkler Dawson tells the true story of the scandalous murder investigation that became the inspiration for both Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter and the first true-crime book published in America.


On a cold winter day in 1832, Sarah Maria Cornell was found dead in a quiet farmyard in a small New England town. When her troubled past and a secret correspondence with charismatic Methodist minister Reverend Ephraim Avery was uncovered, more questions emerged. Was Sarah’s death a suicide...or something much darker? Determined to uncover the real story, Victorian writer Catharine Read Arnold Williams threw herself into the investigation as the trial was unfolding and wrote what many claim to be the first American true-crime narrative, Fall River. The murder divided the country and inspired Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter—but the reverend was not convicted, and questions linger to this day about what really led to Sarah Cornell’s death. Until now.

In The Sinners All Bow, acclaimed true-crime historian Kate Winkler Dawson travels back in time to nineteenth-century small-town America, emboldened to finish the work Williams started nearly two centuries before. Using modern investigative advancements—including “forensic knot analysis” and criminal profiling (which was invented fifty-five years later with Jack the Ripper)—Dawson fills in the gaps of Williams’s research to find the truth and bring justice to an unsettling mystery that speaks to our past as well as our present, anchored by three women who subverted the script they were given.

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320 pages

Average rating: 8

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Community Reviews

cozyandcontentnc
Jan 25, 2025
8/10 stars
Historical true crime with a literary connection. Fall River, Massachusetts is a cursed town, most famous for the Lizzie Borden murders but I had never heard of the murder of Sarah Maria Cornell, who served as the inspiration of Hester Prynne in The Scarlet Letter. I expected it to be a case where Sarah was written off by the community and her murder left unsolved, but people actually gave a damn about her. The man suspected (and most likely guilty) of killing her was put on trial. There was an autopsy, along with incriminating observations by the women who prepared her body for burial. It was more than I expected given the time period and how little might have been done to bring her justice. I appreciated the organization and pacing of the chapters, and found the additional investigation into Catherine Read Williams and her famous novel Fall River to be fascinating. Her bias (common for writers of the time) is evident but not without reason. Kate Winkler Dawson did a fantastic job bringing life to a story that could’ve easily be left in the shadows of time.

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