I dont have new information about the case, but I do have news thats connected with it.
For years Ive been thinking about writing something based on Janes murder.
Ive gotten a decent start on a novel. Its working title is News of Elsewhere.
It wont be a mystery, although the protagonist will not have an easy time working things out. It will be a novel of guilt, retribution, hidden and distant allies, and the connections between two cultures thousands of miles apart. And, of course, departmental politics and jealousy, sexual mayhem, love and friendship, perhaps a drug theme and perhaps a closeted gay theme. Police ineptitude and corruption, university indifference, and so on.
Heres whats going to be different about it.
As you know, when I was involved in Janes murder I was an ordinary twenty-something graduate student whose life had been pretty much spent in the academic world. I thought about creating a protagonist very much like me. But then Id end up with graduate student involved in murder . . . tries to figure it out . . . and I didnt think that would make for very interesting fiction. There are more than enough novels featuring youngish straight white male educated protagonists.
What led me to Websleuths and this thread was discovering that Ausgirl had located the website for my story collection, A Red Woman Was Crying.
It never seemed appropriate to say anything much about that book. But the novels going to build on it, so if Im going to tell you about the novel I need to tell you about the story collection.
Its set mainly in 1969-70, and includes 7 stories and six myths. Six of the stories in first person -- are narrated by a Pacific people called the Nagovisi, and one is told by the anthropologist, some 30 years later.
The narrators spin stories about their relationship with the anthropologist who has come to them, whose name is Elliot. In the six stories set in Nagovisi, Elliot never gets a voice. The narrators report what he says, but were never inside his head. His presence links the stories. The reader comes to understand Elliot and the Nagovisi -- by understanding how the different narrators interacted with him. Two of them extract secrets from him. As the stories move on, both Elliot and the Nagovisi learn about each other, and they all change.
Theres an off-stage character named Anna, an anti-war radical whos gone underground in the US.
Elliot becomes very close to a man named Mesiamo, a powerful and much-feared leader who introduces himself to the reader by saying, I dont kill people any more. Among other things, he teaches Elliot the uses of violence -- lethal and otherwise a sophisticated calculus of power, revenge and reciprocity.
Now imagine a graduate student like Elliot who becomes caught up in the murder of his close friend (perhaps lover). Before he goes to the field, his reponses wouldnt be especially interesting. But the Mesiamo-trained Elliot back from the field, who realizes that the man who killed his friend is going to get away with it, will behave very differently. Very. That student Elliot after fieldwork is a force to be reckoned with.
The first half will be set in Nagovisi. Some of the characters from A Red Woman Was Crying will be in it (Lalaga, Siro, Mesiamo, Siuwako) and there will be one new character, the teenage girl Lakabula. Elliot will have a voice and we'll be in his head.
The guilt part I mentioned is because Elliot is involved in Lakabulas death. He doesnt cause her death, but he fails to prevent it. Elliot reveals his own secrets (about Anna, in particular) but he also holds Nagovisi secrets that can explain why Lakabula died, but revealing those secrets will compromise people he loves.
I wont go into detail, but basically Elliot (with Mesiamos approval) violates his anthropological ethics for the greater good, hoping that news of what hes done to help settle matters in the village wont work its way back to Cambridge.
Not long after Elliot returns to Cambridge, Kate (thats Janes working name) is killed. Elliot, knowing some of Kates secrets, realizes too late that he might have prevented the murder. But he didnt understand the danger that Kate was in, and didnt want to interfere in what he did understand (anthropologists are very big on non-interference). There are obviously rough parallels between Kates death and Lakabulas death, although Lakabula wasnt murdered. In both cases, Elliot has to come to terms with his reponsibility.
If youre interested in meeting Elliot and the Nagovisi in A Red Woman Was Crying, you can pick up the book from any online retailer. Independent bookstores can order it. Theres also an inexpensive Kindle edition.
Im hoping for a completed first draft in about a year. It could happen more quickly.