She Devils of Austria & Germany by Sylvia Perrini

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SheDevilsFemale Serial Killers

Format: eBook, Kindle
Pub. Date: 2013
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime
Pages: 74
Read: 1/28/2016
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

This is a compilation of cases of Female killers that were born and or lived in Austria and Germany. Most of them are serial killers. The oldest case the first murder occurred in 1797, the most recent was 2010.

It seems that way back then, many a woman thought the only way to get out of a bad marriage was to kill her husband. Also, the non-availably of employment opportunities for women lead some to marry rich husbands, then kill them for their estate. Then of course, there were the women who genuinely didn’t want to work.

Some killed parents they didn’t want to care for, some killed children their new partners didn’t want, some killed anyone who got in their way.

Method of murder for most was poison.

Most of the information in these accounts comes from previously published sources. And the chapters are short. Making this a quick but fascinating read.

Recommended to those who like just the basics of true crime accounts.

Delivered from Evil by Ron Franscell

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DeliveredFromEvilTrue Stories of Ordinary People Who Faced Monstrous Mass Killers and Survived

Format: eBook, Kindle
Pub. Date: 2011
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime ~ My eBook
Pages: 272
Read: 1/27/2016
Rating: Really liked it ♥♡

Let’s be honest, I am a sucker for authors who become my friend on Facebook. It helps when the author is highly recommended by people whose opinions I value.

Although I really like a long book chock full of all the gory details, sometimes I just want to breeze through a book, when that happens a collection of short stories will do. These are all true accounts and in my cheeky Goodreads review all I said was this book was first rate. Most of the accounts of the shootings / murders are, just the facts ma’am, the most detail comes from the surviving victims stories.

Every chapter gives the survivors name and the name of the shooting, the focus is on the victims, I like this, so often the killers get all the press. Some of these events were familiar to me, some I had never heard about. Like the book before this, this book has added more books to my, I want to read this pile.

Some shootings: (listing the ones I already knew about) The McDonald’s Massacre in San Ysidro, California; The Luby’s Massacre in Killeen Texas; Tim Ursin and the Howard Johnson Sniper (I think I read this on Ron’s Facebook Page), New Orleans, Louisiana; the University of Texas Clock Tower shooter, Austin, Texas.

I definitely recommend this book.

Whoever Fights Monsters by Robert K. Ressler, Tom Shachtman

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WhoeverFightsMonstersMy Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for the FBI

Format: eBook
Pub. Date: 1992
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime ~ Library Book, 3M Cloud Library
Pages: 289
Read: 1/25/2016
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

This is another of those books that has been on my to-read list for a long time. As noted above, Robert Ressler has been tracking serial killers with the FBI for 20 years and his experience shows. He is rather humble and admits that ‘Profilers don’t catch killers. Cops catch killers.’ Profiling is just a tool to help them.

This book is part auto-biography and part the history of profiling. The auto-biography part is not extensive, just enough to let you know how Mr. Ressler got into the FBI and why he holds some of the opinions he does.

He details the work he initiated in interviewing serial killers and how they differ. He also gives brief histories of some cases, some very well known, Dahmer and Gacy, and some that I hadn’t heard of, which of course means, more books to read!

This was a very easy (well despite the subject matter) book to read. It has a nice conversational style, informative, and not at all boring. I recommend this book.

The Bodies In Barrels Murders by Jeremy Pudney

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BodiesinBarrelsFormat: Trade Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime
Pages: 282
Read: 1/09/2016
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

On May 20, 1999 Detectives Greg Stone and Steve McCoy cruised into Snowtown, a small hamlet in South Australia. They were looking for a Toyota Land Cruiser that they believed was tied to the disappearance of Elizabeth Haydon, they found much more than that. What they found would blow the lid off their investigation into a suspected serial killer, they found 6 barrels with human remains.

John Justin Bunting is considered the worst serial killer in Australian history. He and his accomplice, Robert Joe Wagner, were fueled by their hatred of paedophiles, this doesn’t explain why some of their victims were not paedophiles, or why they stole their government benefits after their deaths, the author suspects John Bunting just liked to watch people die and liked not having to actually work for a living. Stealing benefits also kept the murders secret, since withdrawing money from people’s accounts made it look like they were still alive.

After the arrests James Vlassakis turned himself into police and confessed to his part in the murders. He became the Crown’s star witness. Jeremy Pudney paints a sympathetic picture of James Vlassakis and manages to do this without making one feel sorry for him. While a vulnerable youth, he still knew right from wrong and has blood on his hands.

This is a very detailed account of John Buntings life, the crimes, how and why the others got involved, the police investigation and finally the trial. It was a fascinating read from start to finish, and I can’t think of any questions left unanswered. I recommend this book to true crime fans.

Winter by Marissa Meyer

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Winter(The Lunar Chronicles, #4)
Format: eBook
Pub. Date: 2015
Type: Fiction, Fantasy ~ Library Book, 3M Cloud Library
Pages: 824
Read: 1/05/2016
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

If you have not read the first three book: CINDER, SCARLET and CRESS, this review will contain spoilers. Also, it is best to read this series in order.

This the last book in the series. It has been a fun read and this book was not a disappointment. It has all our old friends and some new ones, along with the usual enemies and villains. I was kind of sad to see it end, but there are ‘filler books’, as I like to call them. Books with the designation: The Lunar Chronicles, 0.5 and 0.6, which kind of explain how certain characters got the way they are. For instance, Fairest (The Lunar Chronicles #3.5) gives us Queen Levana’s history, why she always uses her glamour and why she is so power mad. So it’s not really over, until it is.

Current read 

Bank Holiday Murders
The Bank Holiday Murders by Tom Wescott

The True Story of the First Whitechapel Murders (Jack the Ripper Book 1)
Kindle eBook

Don’t Look Behind You by Ann Rule

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AnnRule15Don’t Look Behind You and Other True Cases (Crime Files #15) by Ann Rule

Format: eBook, Kobo Book
Pub. Date: 2011
Type:Non-Fiction, True Crime
Pages: 465
Read: 12/07
Rating: Liked it ♥

If you are familiar with Ann Rule’s Crime Files, you know that this is a compilation of cases. The first one is always very lengthy, normally about half of the book, and the rest are smaller. I can’t really give you a synopsis of the cases, I read this almost a month ago and kind of buzzed through it. What I will say is this, if you like Ann Rule’s writing, and her Crime Files, you will probably like this.

For those of you who feel (I’ve read the reviews) that she ‘phoned this in’, this was written rather recently, when her health was failing. I say this because the writing may not be up to her previous works, but still good and readable.

The Onion Field by Joseph Wambaugh,

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TheOnionFieldFormat: eBook, Kobo Book
Pub. Date: 1973
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime
Pages: 512
Read: 12/03/2015
Rating: Liked it ♥♡

This is the frighteningly true story of two young cops and two young robbers whose separate destinies fatally cross one March night in a bizarre execution in a deserted Los Angeles field.

The Onion Field is one of those true crime books that I always meant to read but never seemed to get around. My true crime book group started an author of the month and I picked Wambaugh. I picked him because I had another book by him I was reading, however I was having trouble with it. When I saw this book on sale in Kobo Books I grabbed it.

On a Saturday in California 4 lives collide and end up in an onion field. One dead and the rest changed forever.

What I like about this book is Wambaugh delves into more than the crime, he relates how the events affected the life of the surviving police officer, how his fellow officers reacted. He discusses PTSD even though it wasn’t called that then.

This was not an easy book to read, there is much detail to absorb, but I think the detail makes the book. You need the detail to understand what truly happened.

plagiarism

I discovered the first one almost by accident. Then I started looking. It wasn’t a one time thing. It enrages me and makes me sick to my stomach at the same time. I work so hard to make my reviews ‘my own’. My thoughts, my words, it just sickens me. A sample follows. I am putting her name because thieves deserve to be exposed and publicly shamed.  What makes it worse is she is an artist. Would she like people to steal her artwork?

There is plenty of action in this tale. Family relations play a very important role especially between fathers and sons. Author Steven Mosby looks at how domestic violence can have devastating and long-lasting effects throughout generations. He also looks at the nature of evil and whether people are doomed to repeat the sins of the parents or whether they have free will to break the cycle. The Murder Code is a good… but not a great read. While there are many interesting common personal conflicts and histories… the pace of the story was up and down and sometimes just where the plot was going was hard to follow. ~ Carol

There is plenty of action in this tale but its strongest point is in the characters. Family relations play a very important role especially between fathers and sons. In the novel, author Steven Mosby looks at how domestic violence can have devastating and long-lasting effects throughout generations. He also looks at the nature of evil and whether people are doomed to repeat the sins of the parents or whether they have free will to break the cycle.

Amazon reviewer: Maxine McLister

I am so fucking pissed, I never liked her reviews, she would never write her own synopsis, always: FROM AMAZON. Now I find out her “thoughts” are also from Amazon. This is the third book review I’ve found she copied. I am not done with my investigation.

Then No One Can Have Her by Caitlin Rother

I recieved this book free for an honest review and for agreeing to participate in a blog tour. Scroll down for links to the other participants reviews.

IMG_4195Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2015
Type: Non-Fiction, True Crime ~ ARC
Pages: 427
Read: 10/31/2015
Rating: Really liked it ♥♡

In July 2008 Carol Kennedy was found dead in her home. At first glance the scene looked like an accident. Upon closer inspection it was determined the scene was staged and Carol had been murdered. The main suspect was her ex-husband Steve DeMocker, but there was no clear cut evidence he did it, no ‘smoking gun’. In fact several witnesses testified he had never been abusive. But he was.

Ms. Rother shows by her careful relating of events how abuse is not always physical. What I like about this book, is that through all the drama, the twists and turns and the “SMDH” moments, Ms. Rother never loses what this case is about, a woman who was brutally murdered. The detectives were committed to finding evidence of her killer and the prosecutor was committed to convicting him. Also Ms. Rother shows no bias in her writing, she is very much a just the facts writer. How she spins them into a lay-person readable format is magic, I guess. She also doesn’t insert herself into the narrative. I mention these three things because these are the things that turn me off from certain books/authors.

From start to finish I was gripped by this book. At times I put it down and read something else, but when I came back to it, I was able to pick up and keep reading, I never had to skim back, it was that compelling. I recommend this book.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Caitlin was kind enough to sit down with me for an interview (by that I mean I sat down and e-mailed her the questions and she sat down and emailed me the answers):

BF: How much say do you have in what cases you write about, when they are published and the cover art. I ask this because is something a lot of my friend who read true crime wonder about. Also I have heard different things from different authors.

I have pitched books on a few cases that I didn’t end up writing because I couldn’t interest an editor or publisher in them. But unlike being a newspaper reporter (which I was for 19 years), when an editor can tell you what to write and how to write it, that is not the case with books — which is why I like being an author so much more than working for “the man.” All my books have been on topics that I wanted to write, and the majority of them were published as I originally wrote them. Some publishers have very hands-on editors, and others leave the writing (and direction of the research) almost completely up to me. Also, now that I am an established author I can publish some of those stories that mainstream traditional publishers reject by going with an indie publisher like WildBlue Press or even self-publishing. So even that roadblock has been removed for me (and many other authors), and I have several projects in the works to take advantage of that new frontier. Cover art is a whole different thing. I have virtually no say in the covers designed by traditional publishers, however that is not the case with indie or self-published books, where I have more say and more control. The timing of publication is also something over which I have little control. Traditional publishers generally take about a year to publish a book — and that’s after you turn in the manuscript. With indie publishing it’s about 3-6 months, and self-publishing, which I haven’t done yet, can be done far more quickly.

BF: Personal violence is very common. What was it about this case that made you want to write about it?
The Steve DeMocker case has so many bizarre and unique layers to it, the domestic violence aspect was really just the backdrop for a whole host of other issues and legal machinations. This is the story of a love gone wrong, complicated by sex/love addiction, greed, manipulation, blood money, murder and a roller coaster ride to justice in a small mountain town in Arizona. But there is so much more: a suicide under very strange circumstances, the “voice in the vent” of DeMocker’s jail cell supposedly telling him who really killed his wife, the mysterious male DNA under the victim’s fingernails that didn’t match DeMocker’s, the kooky ME who transported the victim’s body from Prescott to Phoenix in the back of his pickup truck in the heat of July, and the list goes on.

BF: You have written a couple novels, is writing fiction harder than non-fiction or just different? What are the differences. Update: I said a couple because I was looking at a website that stated Caitlin Rother had written 2 novels.
I have only written one novel that has been published and that is NAKED ADDICTION. (I have a sequel in the works, but it is not ready for prime time yet). It took me 17 years to get it published, and I just revised, updated and re-released it with WildBlue Press late last year. Fiction is harder in some ways to write and easier in others. It doesn’t require anywhere near as much research as my true crime books, so it is not as much work, plus I love writing fiction. It’s fun to make stuff up. But as an investigative reporter, it has always been easier for me to write a story that is compelling when it is true. I don’t know why. It’s also been more difficult for me to find an audience for my fiction, because my loyal readers like true stories better. That said, I’ve had pretty good reviews from TC readers who say they were pleasantly surprised that they liked it so much. So I hope more TC readers will give it a try! The more readers I can get to try my novel, the more likely I will be to write another one.

BF: You have 10 books published. Do you have a favorite and if so which one? If you don’t, can you tell me some things you liked about a few of them?
That’s like asking me which is my favorite child. I like them all for different reasons, and each one has a different story behind it. THEN NO ONE CAN HAVE HER is a very complicated story to tell, so it was a difficult book to write. It felt like a bear I had to wrestle to the ground, both personally and professionally, so I’m proud of that accomplishment. LOST GIRLS has been my most controversial and also, for me, my most important book. I will always have a special place in my heart for POISONED LOVE, my first and my best-selling book by far. NAKED ADDICTION is my baby and my labor of love, because it took so long to publish, only to go out of print, then the publisher went into foreclosure on the eve of a re-release. It took a couple years to get the rights back, then I went back in to improve it and re-release it, so it was 24 years for it to become what it is today.

BF: Thanks for agreeing to this interview.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Oct. 26: Review by Colloquium,
Oct. 27: Review by Psychotic State Book Reviews,
Oct. 28: Review by Sharon’s Garden of Book Reviews,
Oct. 29: Review by Maureen’s Musings,
Oct. 30: Review by The Woman Condemned,
Nov. 2: Review and interview by Just a Girl, Living, Reading, Watching and Writing,
Nov. 3: Review by As I Turn the Pages,
Nov. 4: Guest post by Rother on Colloquium,
Nov. 5: Review by Destiny’s Book Reviews,
Nov. 6: Review by Escape With Dollycas,
Nov. 9: Review by Jersey Girl Book Reviews,
Nov. 10: Review by Ellen Wallace,
Nov. 11: Post by Rother on WildBlue Press
Nov. 12: Review by Educated Reader