Showing posts with label true crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label true crime. Show all posts

Zodiac Review

Zodiac
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
A lot of other reviews note the stretches, hunches and speculation that appear in this book as its primary weaknesses. None of them, however, note that most police work is based on hunches and stretches, and most crimes are solved through nearly blind speculation. In fact, crafting the opening salvo of solving a crime is all speculation, as the only people who were actually at the scene as the crime took place were the victims and their killer, not the police. Thus, the speculation is necessary to approach the task of solving any crime. As a result, the loose ends in this book are a very necessary and a common component to solving any crime.
The Zodiac killings are very close to me as I am a lifelong resident of the San Francisco Bay Area. David Berkowitz was in New York City, Jack the Ripper was a phantom of London and the Manson Family had operated primarily in Southern California. All were far, far away. The Zodiac was right in my backyard. To this day I still get chills when after passing over the Benicia Bridge, I see the green traffic sign hanging over the highway that reads, "Lake Herman Road, Next Right". Lake Herman Road of course, being where the Zodiac first struck by murdering teens Betty Lou Jensen and David Faraday, as they sat parked in a remote lover's lane.
The constant interest and apparent obsession with the Zodiac murders is concentrated around two facts of the case: firstly that the Zodiac was never caught. All this book and most others do is outline what the author believes to be the best, most likely suspect. The other reason why people are so drawn to this case is the odd and mysterious way the killer stalked his victims and taunted the police after the crimes. After a killing, the Zodiac would usually call in and report his own crime. More shocking than that, he usually did it within sight of the police stations he had been taunting. If that weren't enough, he wrote ciphers, or coded messages, and sent them into the local newspapers. Some of these ciphers were solved, yet many were not despite the best efforts of the law enforcement community throughout North America.
Graysmith takes us on a rollercoaster ride as the crimes are committed. The reader can visualize and feel the cold, dark night on Lake Herman Road. The same feeling is present when the man who stalked Darlene Ferrin for months prior shows up just a few miles down the same Lake Herman Road where the first double murder was committed, on a turn out for the golf course at Blue Rock Springs. It's here where he takes the life of Darlene and leaves Mike Mageau clinging to life. The reader is transported to the remote, grassy peninsula by Lake Berryessa where the Zodiac first donned his executioner's costume, and where he stalked his victims, leaving only one of them barely alive. Finally, we get inside Paul Stine's cab with the Zodiac as he commits his most infamous crime on the cold, damp streets of the Presidio Heights of San Francisco. Graysmith goes into great detail to make the crimes as real as possible to us, allowing the reader to view the crimes from nearly every angle. The Zodiac's infamous calls to the police and letters to the newspapers are sprinkled throughout, setting the stage for the nationwide manhunt.
After the rollercoaster ride that is the Zodiac's killing spree, we are immersed into the facts of the crimes, the strange coincidences and the lives of those chasing the Zodiac. We are even introduced to unsolved murders that are not credited to the Zodiac, but have the same traits as Zodiac crimes and are within what is considered to be the Zodiac's territory. Graysmith explains to us how he became involved and how a novice approach yielded the best Zodiac suspect and the one widely excepted as the most likely by the law enforcement officials closest to the case. In a pure literary sense, this book is as engaging and riveting as they come. I don't believe it to be a scary book; some people mentioned that they wouldn't read it late at night or while alone. In fact, those are the only times I did read it. The setting in which a book is enjoyed is an important element to how the book's presentation comes off to the reader. I remember reading it on a cold night, with the rain beating against my windows. It took me out and made me think of how quiet and cold Lake Herman Road must have been at that moment. A place where people say that a haunting, grey fog still sits over the road and the place of the murders...even after the rest of the fog as blown inland, or on a night where no fog is present anywhere else.
If you're into true crime or even some Northern California history, this book is a must read. Take it all with a grain of salt, don't allow the author's conclusions to automatically become yours. Instead, take the book in, try and put yourself into the scenes and try to solve the crimes yourself. The Zodiac murders have captivated the minds of novice detectives and common folk alike; so don't be surprised if you end up with the urge to read this book a second and third time. I know I did.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Zodiac



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Zodiac

Read More...

The False Prophet: Conspiracy, Extortion and Murder in the Name of God (Berkley True Crime) Review

The False Prophet: Conspiracy, Extortion and Murder in the Name of God (Berkley True Crime)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Taylor Helzer was a devout Mormon who lost his moral compass after diving into the teachings of a "self-help" program and heavy drug use. Charismatic since a child, he managed to manipulate his brother and a lonely woman into sharing his belief that he was a prophet who would save the world from the Apocalypse. His plan was to kidnap the top leaders of the church and force them to write letters to Mormons declaring him the new leader.

Author and journalist Claire Booth gives an excellent narrative of the shocking events of the summer of 2000, when the Helzer gang brutally murdered five innocent Bay Area residents -- including the daughter of blues musician Elvin Bishop -- in an effort to extort money he hoped would finance his plan.
Booth gives us insight into the real nature and history of all the people involved -- the victims, their families, law enforcement, the killers -- and shows us how Helzer transformed into the false prophet.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The False Prophet: Conspiracy, Extortion and Murder in the Name of God (Berkley True Crime)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The False Prophet: Conspiracy, Extortion and Murder in the Name of God (Berkley True Crime)

Read More...

Red Zone: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of the San Francisco Dog Mauling Review

Red Zone: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of the San Francisco Dog Mauling
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In one sense, Red Zone is not an easy book to read: it is, as it ought to be, a gripping but profoundly disturbing story of frightening people engaging in shocking activities. The horrible attack by dogs trained to kill, the attack that caused the death of Diane Whipple, is terrible in its own right, and the reader cannot help but feel compassion for the innocent victim. But as Aphrodite Jones reveals in her book, there many more layers to the story than there seem at first to be.
As she examines the case, Jones quickly takes one into a world that, one suspects, most readers have never imagined and could never imagine: a world in which lawyers seem to lose their bearings and come under the influence of an apparently charismatic convict already in prison yet still engaging in criminal activities. That the criminal activities engaged in by Aryan Brotherhood member Paul Schneider and lawyers Marjorie Knoller and Robert Noel are by now fairly well known is due in no small part to Ms. Jones' book.
The story is presented in a clear and unaffected style that draws attention to the contents rather than to the writer. A tale of unfolding and deepening levels of horror, the book is also a readable and well-researched example of what good investigative reporting can uncover and deliver. I recommend this book. I have, in fact, recommended Red Zone in my college-level essay writing classes to students who are interested in researching current/recent events, as I have also recommended Ms. Jones' earlier book, All S/he Wanted.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Red Zone: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of the San Francisco Dog Mauling



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Red Zone: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of the San Francisco Dog Mauling

Read More...

Dark and Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective, Isaiah W. Lees Review

Dark and Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective, Isaiah W. Lees
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Historical book on Detective Lees and many of the crimes of that era, as well as a taste of the founding and development of San Francisco. For a historical it isn't dry reading and I do recommend it.
However, the book isn't polished. I feel that it was almost there, as if it needed one more editing pass. How information was grouped into chapters is unclear. Many items seemed as if thrown in just to get them in the book. Some items were referenced multiple times without any reason for the additional reference. The author would mention Lees as Lees then other times as Isaiah, making the reader wonder if it was two different people. Many chapters end awkwardly making them seem unfinished. Some of the most interesting crimes are passed over too quickly. That said, the book is good for bringing to life the era, the man and the crimes. I was surprised that I had never heard of Lees before.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Dark and Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective, Isaiah W. Lees



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Dark and Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective, Isaiah W. Lees

Read More...

Murder By the Bay: Historic Homicide In and About the City of San Francisco Review

Murder By the Bay: Historic Homicide In and About the City of San Francisco
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The author, Charles F. Adams, credits his sources. But most of the stories found in this book were included in either San Francisco Murders, which was published in 1947 and edited by Joseph Henry Jackson, and Great Crimes of San Francisco, published in 1974 and edited by Dean W. Dickensheet. Adams has added very little to the tales he reiterates from these two books, and the originals were much more well written. There are innumerable typographical errors in this work, including instances in which the murderers' names are spelled in two different ways. Also, a citation to Dickensheet's volume says it was published in 1947 instead of 1974. The above-mentioned books are readily available from online booksellers, and are far more detailed and engaging. Adams' work does have one advantage: it includes some fuzzy half-tone photographs of the murderers and their victims, whereas the earlier works were unillustrated. Read the older books, then use this one, if need be, to look at the pictures.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Murder By the Bay: Historic Homicide In and About the City of San Francisco



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Murder By the Bay: Historic Homicide In and About the City of San Francisco

Read More...