Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Clifford L. Linedecker. By AMI Books.
The regular list price is $5.99.
Sells new for $4.99.
There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about The Murder of Laci Peterson: The Inside Story of What Really Happened.
- Ok, I admit it: I cheat my diet now and then with a nutritious Krispy Kreme donut, & sometimes I read the ever erudite Enquirer - what else to do when stranded in a slow-moving check-out line? Cliff Linedecker, Best-Selling Author in his own write, has teamed with National Enquirer staffers in several recent rush-to-print-while-the-story's-still hot "true crime" books. And the results are, amazingly, pretty good.
This book goes beyond the quickie sound bites and glimmers we all saw on TV. It makes Scott Peterson look even more guilty. But yes, the criminal justice jurisprudence of the United States of America insists that one is innocent until proven guilty. Pray, Scott, that your potential jury pool does not read this book! WWARD? What Would Ann Rule (reigning diva of True Crime Writing) Do? Wait until the jury verdict is in and at least some of the seemingly endless appeals are exhausted. So, while reading this book, remember the tabloid from which it sprang: an entertaining diversion, a guilty pleasure about as substantial and nutritious as a Krispy Kreme, and devour them both. Reviewed by TundraVision.
- This book is very informative. If one knows very little about the background of the case, it gives good details. It also comes with good pictures. If you are like me and have logged onto her web site along with modbee.com and ktvu.com and scottpetersontrial.com and have already read every article, this book will be repetitive.
I only got it because I wish I got to know Laci Peterson. It was my way of getting to know her, her family, and to see what she went through in her final days. This tragedy has touched me! The Rocha family is so down to earth and it's a shame that this even happened to Laci and Conner.
- In the beginning of this book, it says Lacy's birthday is May 4th, 1975 (the day before mine), but when the author talks about Laci's memorial service on April 27th, 2003, he says Laci would have turned 28 that day. A caption of one of the photos says the same thing.
When the author first mentions Marc Klaas, whose daughter Polly was kidnapped and murdered, he says it happened in 1993. Near the end of the book, he says Richard Davis kidnapped her in 1983. I was BORN in 1983! The incorrect year appears twice in that paragraph. This book is full of interesting tidbits about the case, but some readers will still catch onto incorrect information such as dates and years. It makes me wonder if the author included other incorrect information in his book. I can't wait until the trial is over and better authors write better books with all the grisly details we didn't have access to during the investigation and the trial.
- How cam someone write a book about a crime when it had not even gone to court. ?
- You may as well pick up any choice tabloid and believe it as gospel truth if you give this book the time of day. Unfounded accounts and blatant lies are countless in this book. I bought two of them, one for me and another for my best friend. I am suprised she doesn't hate me now!!! LOL! Seriously though, it is based off of rumors and pure speculation. It was not worth a red cent. Don't waste your time with this one. Instead, get a real account of the tragedy like Catherine Crier's book,"A Deadly Game" or Sharon Rocha's,"For Laci". All I can really tell you, is if you must read this book after reading my review, is you will totally agree with me and live in regret.
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Mandelsberg. By Pinnacle.
The regular list price is $4.99.
Sells new for $24.99.
There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about The Crimes of the Rich and Famous.
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Marda Liggett Woodbury. By University of Minnesota Press.
The regular list price is $20.00.
Sells new for $19.00.
There are some available for $3.44.
Read more...
Purchase Information
3 comments about Stopping the Presses: The Murder of Walter W. Liggett.
- As a former Minnesotan, I was interested in this generally untold side of Minnesota history. I have lived in Minneapolis and loved it, but was shaken by these horrors that long preceeded my time there. I would have appreciated more specific addresses and names of businesses where events took place as it would have put the story in a more real context, but only for those familiar with the city. It is almost unbelievable to imagine the kind of opposition that existed to those publishing information which went contrary to the public image desired by those in power-both "legitimate" and underworld people. I'm glad Ms. Woodbury used her research skills to write this work. It does indeed exonerate her family, and her respect for her parents is well deserved, especially her telling of her mother's grace and dignity in coping with this tragedy.
- Marda Woodbury's look at her own father's death is a gripping and well-researched look back at a tragedy and possibly a government cover-up. Woodbury does an excellent job of re-evaluating her father, Walter Liggett, and his death. Her father was an old-school muckraker in Minnesota and one of the most vocal opponents of then-governor Floyd Olson.
Not being familiar with this particular case before I read the book, I was concerned that this would be some sort of apologistic, revisionist history. However, the more I researched the case, the more I found that Woodbury had given a fair assessment of the murder and of her father's career. The book is a case study in how political machines worked, a good look at the rise of gangland in the heart of the Midwest, and a really interesting history of Minnesota journalism in the 1930s. Liggett argues that her father was too good of an advesary, knew too much and couldn't be bribed - all fatal ingredients which spelled his demise. I wish Liggett would have explored her father's reputation as a blackmailer. While she makes several references to it, and while that was many the gripe of many of Liggett's contemporaries, she doesn't seem to do as thorough of a job in researching the claims of blackmailing as she does in other parts of the book. While that particular area isn't exhaustively explored, the book still seems to have objectivity and balance. Woodbury should be complimented for her well-documented research and her crafty ability to present this case in a new light, some half-a-century after it happened. She has done not only an admirable job in her role as a historian, but we also are given a first-hand account of what happened to the family and a look into the private dealings of Walter Liggett.
- Marda Liggett Woodbury has done a first class job in researching and describing the life and death of her father, a leftist newspaper publisher who was murdered in front of her in 1935. But she does not simply write a sentimental account of her relationship with him, but delves deep into the history of a time and place. In addition, it tells the story of one man's decision to expose a deeply corrupt instituion, one whose faults he could no longer ignore. Attacking the very political party he had long supported, he exposed candidates ties to the Twin Cities's Irish and Jewish Mobs and vowed to bring down their most powerful Political Boss, Minnesota Governor Floyd Olsen. It was a crusade that would cost him his life. When he couldn't be intimidated, framed, or bribed, he was machine gunned to death before the terrified eyes of his wife and children. The shooter was identified as Isadore Blumenfield, alias "Kid Cann" the boss of Minneapolis's Jewish Mafia. I will leave you to find out the result of the trial by reading the book. In closing, as a religious conservative, I agree with virtually none of Walter Liggett's political stances, but in one regard I admire him. When the Liberal Party he supported became just another crooked political machine, he turned on them with a vengeance. For that, I wish there were more like him today.
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Derek Mcadam and Peter Hounam. By Frog Books.
The regular list price is $12.95.
Sells new for $2.00.
There are some available for $1.99.
Read more...
Purchase Information
2 comments about Who Killed Diana?.
- Don't waste your money on this one. If you are really interested in conspiracies on Diana, go and surf the net. You'll get more than what you find in this book-and then some!
- I read this novel after reading the excellent "Whose death in the Tunnel?" by Aaron Becker. This book did not begin to compare. I read it to the end hoping for a glimmer but it left me cold.
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Jim Defelice. By Pinnacle.
The regular list price is $6.50.
Sells new for $3.13.
There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Kill Grandma For Me (Pinnacle True Crime).
- I would not reccommend this book only because it does not truthfully and accurately describe what everything was really like for Wendy Gardner and James Evans.
DeFelice paints Wendy Gardner out to be some kind of cold-blooded youngster in a together-forever-in-love-relationship. THAT is the FANTASY. Wendy and James were nothing at all like Romeo and Juliet, and neither of them had a clue of what 'in-love' means. These two shared a obsessive, hormone-filled relationship that wouldn't have lasted anyway. Wendy came from a broken home and lived with her grandmother who was physically and mentally abusing Wendy. Nobody, including DSS had done a thing to help in that situation. Betty Gardner's behavior got worse as she tried keeping a punk like James away from her granddaughter. When James Evans killed Betty Gardner, he was not forced or manipulated into it at all. It was a decision James had made all by himself that didn't have to happen. He was angry at Betty for threatening his sex life and for being abusive to Wendy. That is how he justified his remorseless murder of the old "stupid bitch." (As he called her). He was no pawn, and he should be held accountable for his own actions. I love true-crime books, but this one has too much fantasy and things which aren't true at all. It's a shame to see that story and the people painted out the way this book did, because it's not an honest, accurate painting.
- ***"This rag depicts Wendy as a cold-blooded, sex crazed monster who cared nothing for her Grandmother.****
I loved the book and I feel it was very well written. As for the quote from an earlier reviewer... cold blooded- Wendy planned the murder and placed the body in the trunk- that to me is cold blooded. Sex crazed- fact is that they did have sex right after the horrible crime. Who care nothing about her grandmother- well I can honestly say that I would not want someone to care for me that much as to want me dead so they could spend all my money for nonsense. Facts are evident.. horrible crime with unjust convictions. Many criminal minds are still rotting away in prison that did not kill but planned the murder, but some get away with murder. I too know this case well and will sign my name as Friend of James.
- Yea no doubt lets not put all the blame on Evans, that BS. They were both young so lets not get carried away and paint her as Mother Teresa. Everyone wants to paint her as this poor innocent girl that had nothing to do with the murder. She beat the crap out of her sister so she wouldnt go to the cops, she put the body in the trunk of a car and drove around for days with the body inside. The girl got what she deserved and its a shame shes out today. She should still be locked up just as long as Evans. She got off because shes a girl and thats sexist. And I too know the case and parties involved, and thought the book was pretty acurate with the exception that Evans was not this monster that the book made him out to be.
- I believe the author did an excellent job of blending all the different parts of the story, backgrounds, crime, and court case into a book that reads like a novel. He does paint the main characters, Wendy and James, in a sympathetic light. However, when the killers are 15 and 13 years old, you can't help but feel sad. However, he never goes so far as to say punishment isn't deserved. It is just a sad story of two kids who made a very bad decision. Very well written.
- I sorta knew what I was letting myself in for when I bought it, and wasn't disappointed. True-crime books of the stature of "In Cold Blood" or "The Executioner's Song" seem, generally speaking, to be a thing of the past. The true-crime books glutting the market now tend to be superficial, often poorly written, and exploitative. Why'd I buy this particular superficial, often poorly written, and exploitative book? Saugerties, NY, is one of my favorite upstate towns, and it's always more interesting, if not fascinating, to read about a place you know, even if you only know it as a visitor. Too, as jaded a society as we've unfortunately become over the past several decades, the thought of a 13-year old adolescent and her not-much older boyfriend brutally killing her grandmother still has the ability to shock and one can't help but ask, even as one's mind reels in horror at what human beings-- even 13 and 15 year old human beings-- are capable of doing to each other, "Why? How is this allowed to happen in an ostensibly civilized and compassionate society? How does a 13-year old child become so evil or so sick?" Well, don't expect any answers from DeFelice's book beyond simplistic, facile ones, or any thought-provoking insight. In a nutshell, it's a relatively pedestrian re-creation of the events leading up to the crime, the crime itself, and the aftermath. I can't vouch for the accuracy of the reporting, although certain accusations of "artistic license" have been leveled against the author (for instance, I believe Wendy Gardner recently has said she never "cut" herself, to use one example). This is not to say it's not a brisk, occasionally engrossing, read. The nature of the crime itself almost guarantees that. But, sadly, the book ultimately has little within it to distinguish it from the plethora of other "true-crime" books out there. As a final note: I've read on the internet that James Evans has recently been denied parole. Wendy Gardner was paroled a few years ago, has married, is attending college, and is apparently attempting to do something worthwhile with her life.
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Greg Owens and Darcy Henton. By Red Deer Press.
The regular list price is $18.95.
Sells new for $70.00.
There are some available for $6.08.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about No Kill, No Thrill: The Shocking True Story of Charles Ng - One of North America's Most Horrific Serial Killers.
- An excellent read about the grisly crimes of two men bent on a killing spree to satisfy their twisted needs. Very interesting information on how the RCMP helped to convict one of the mass killers
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Charles Bosworth. By Onyx.
The regular list price is $5.99.
Sells new for $9.50.
There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...
Purchase Information
4 comments about Every Mother's Nightmare (Onyx True Crime).
- this book has very little information in it. When I got through reading this book I was shaking my head wondering. There was very little information about this crime. All I learned was that two beautiful children were murdered & their mother's did everything they could to find the murderer & have him or them punished.
- I have read this book several times and it affects me deeply each time I read it. My heart breaks for Mari Winzen and Jude Govreau. I thought the book was written in a very compassionate matter. It was a horrible tragedy from the beginning but it was made worse because the mothers had to wait almost two years for an arrest and then there were constant delays before there was a trial. Mari and Jude walked the road to hell and made it back in one piece and I have a lot of admiration for them.
- This was an awful experience for two mothers to go through. Children brutally murdered and endless problems abounded. It makes you realize justice is not always swift and easy. I don't see how the mothers survived without killing someone themselves. It was a difficult read at times, trying to remember the aka's of protected sources, and other information was confusing. There were what I think were errors but there was no way to confirm. I do think a better job could have been done with the writing considering the important subject matter. All and all it did tell you what happened.
- This is a every touching book to me cause I knew Tyler the little boy that the book was written about. I just loved the book. And every time I read it just brings back memories that are just to sad. I loved the book.
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Sandy Fawkes. By John Blake.
The regular list price is $29.99.
Sells new for $10.09.
There are some available for $17.33.
Read more...
Purchase Information
2 comments about Natural Born Killer: In Love and on the Road with a Serial Killer.
- This book is touted as a chilling account of life on the road with a serial killer, I did not find any of this book to be chilling, nor well written. Sandy Fawkes is listed as a writer, technically speaking she is, although she is/was a fashion writer, specifically I didn't think she related her experiences all that well, the only thing she kept ranting about was how boring she thought Knowles was and how much smarter she was then him. I found that she was more pre-disposed to talking about his clothes and lack of sexual prowess. Do not waste your money buying this, there were no insights into the mind of Knowles, and as a "investigative journalist" Fawkes failed at securing an interview with Knowles before his death. For anyone thinking this book would have anything of value in profiling or the thought process of of a socio-path look somewhere else.
- I must say, that Sandy Fawkes's book titled "Killing Time" was one of the first books I read out of the true-crime book piles back in the late 80's, that it left such an impression on me, it was the starting point of my long life hobby as a book collector of the gender.
Questions such as, "what made someone commit these horrendous acts, and why?" "What was the motivation behind these crimes, and why spare the life of one but not another?"
Afterall, this book was written way before the term `serial killer' was even coined.
Natural Born Killer is the re-release of that book, minus all the great black and white photographs that accompanied the text of the 1977 book, Killing Time, and with only one very small addition, an "afterword" with the header (February 2004, London) to the length of only 6 pages long.
What is interesting is that in this latest addition, Fawkes retracts her statement from her 1977 publication regarding her feelings towards Knowles, "Knowles was as much a victim as any of the 18 people he killed ...may his poor, demented soul rest in peace", and states, "now I am not sure that I am as keen to find some streak in him deserving of sympathy ...or making others share the blame."
Another interesting fact that I find is that this current publication is titled "In Love And On The Road With A Serial Killer", which is really misleading due to the fact that Fawkes never at any stage claimed to have fallen in love with Knowles.
Quite frankly by the end of the 10th of November of 1974, and only after spending 3 days with him, she couldn't wait to get rid of him.
One wonders whether this is just not one of those quick try to cash-in jobs on the serial killer groupie phenomenon of the millennium era.
She claimed, Knowles was a lousy lover and a wannabe, living a lie and pretence of someone he wished he was, but never would be, the so-called normality this habitual criminal craved for life.
That was also one of the reasons behind Fawkes's narrow escape with death, which she became an unknowingly assistant in living that pretence he craved for so bad, including also the fact that as a journalist she may have given him the publicity and fame he craved for.
Tapes related to the Knowles case (audio confessions by Knowles himself), that in the 1975 hearing, Judge Owens ruled be sealed for 20 years, are briefly mentioned here as Fawkes loosing interest in ever hearing them, though time was closing in on their release.
Makes one wonder whether that not ever knowing got the better of Fawkes, and another re-release of this book later on this year, titled "In Love With A Serial Killer", will include transcripts of those tapes, that may or may not shed light into Knowles's psychopathology behind his serial killing spree that he personally claimed left 35 people dead in his path.
It would be interesting, in the least to say, that after all, these tapes were what haunted Mrs Fawkes and all her readers since 1974.
Nevertheless, it's a great easy going text, that keeps you interested from beginning til end, in line with books the likes of Elizabeth Kendall's "The Phantom Prince: My Life with Ted Bundy."
As a better and cheaper alternative to this title, I recommend Fawkes's original publication on the Knowles case titled "Killing Time."
Read more...
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Linda Spalding. By Anchor.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $10.15.
There are some available for $9.57.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Who Named the Knife: A True Story of Murder and Memory.
Posted in Murder (Saturday, October 11, 2008)
Written by Don Jacobs. By Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company.
The regular list price is $66.95.
Sells new for $66.85.
There are some available for $9.49.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Sexual Predators: Serial Killers in the Age of Neuroscience.
|