Crime Books
Related Subjects: Research Prisons Prevention Books and Authors News and Media Criminals Abuse Murder Trials Victims Kidnapping Organized Crime
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More than elementaryReview Date: 2008-08-06
Doyle and Paget are UnbeatableReview Date: 2008-03-08
I have many editions of Holmes stories, in print, in film and in television episodes, most remarkably and satisfyingly, the Granada series with Jeremy Brett, but I had to have this one.
In most of the collections the one thing that is achingly absent is the series of drawings by Sydney Paget. In "The Original Illustrated Sherlock Holmes," that defect is corrected.
"Here," the flyleaf proclaims, "are the original Sherlock Holmes stories ... as they first appeared in the British Magazine, the Strand." These are facsimiles of the pages of the magazine, so the layout of the narrative in two columns with illustrations inserted in the text, is exactly as it was a hundred years ago, down to the choice of font.
All of the stories are not here. This is not a "Complete Sherlock Holmes." (That volume, sadly, is out of print and is only available, in limited quantities, at some booksellers.) However, all of the stories that were published in their own volumes as The Adventures, The Memoirs, and The Return are here, as well as the serialization of The Hound of the Baskervilles. So, since the stories are available elsewhere, I shall concentrate on the illustrations which are really what make this volume distinctive.
Sydney Paget, who along with Sir John Tenniel, pretty much defined Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century illustration, is the source of much of how we visualize Holmes. He is the man who created the cape and deerstalker that has come to be most associated with the character. (The calabash pipe was the contribution of stage actor William Gillette.) In Paget's illustrations we see Holmes expertly portrayed in all his bi-polar glory, from his languid despair over the lack of imagination in crime to the monomaniacal pursuit of a clue once his interest is aroused. The clients who seek his aid and the villains he threatens are no less clearly drawn. Paget is meticulous in his presentation of significant detail and, as good illustrations should, match perfectly with the moment in the text when the imaginative "snapshot" is taken. He is, perhaps, at his most impressive, though, when the scene calls for darkness, as in the attack by the Hound. The brilliant highlights surrounded by the subtle grays, with just enough detail to suggest the scene, cast against almost complete darkness, is pure genius. Paget is a master of light. As far as I know, this is the only place where the original illustrations and the text appear together and fully justifies its purchase even if, as I have, you possess many other versions of the tales.
Extensive CollectionReview Date: 2008-07-13
This collection contains the following stories from the following collections:
ADVENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES
- Scandal in Bohemia
- Red-Headed League
- Case of Identity
- Boscombe Valley Mystery
- Five Orange Pips
- Man with the Twisted Lip
- Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle
- Adventure of the Speckled Band
- Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb
- Adventure of the Noble Bachelor
- Adventure of the Beryl Coronet
- Adventure of the Copper Beeches
MEMOIRS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES
- Adventure of the Silver Blaze
- Adventure of the Cardboard Box
- Adventure of the Yellow Face
- Adventure of the Stockbroker's Clerk
- Adventure of the "Gloria Scott"
- Adventure of the Musgrave Ritual
- Adventure of the Reigate Squires
- Adventure of the Crooked Man
- Adventure of the Resident Patient
- Adventure of the Greek Interpreter
- Adventure of the Naval Treaty
- Adventure of the Final Problem
THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES
THE RETURN OF SHERLOCK HOLMES
- Adventure of the Empty House
- Adventure of the Norwood Builder
- Adventure of the Dancing Men
- Adventure of the Solitary Cyclist
- Adventure of the Priory School
- Adventure of Black Peter
- Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton
- Adventure of the Six Napoleons
- Adventure of the Three Students
- Adventure of the Golden Pince-Nez
- Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter
- Adventure of the Abbey Grange
- Adventure of the Second Stain
This is a very extensive collection of Sherlock Holmes stories, although the collection is not comprehensive - the stories contained in The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes are missing, and the Study in Scarlet is absent as well. The illustrations are quite good, and occur at a frequency of about once a page, and add - surprisingly - a great deal to the narrative. I highly recommend this collection if you have not been exposed to Sherlock Holmes or if you are looking to consolidate your collection in a single, tightly-bound, illustrated volume.
Nice edition to Read and to KeepReview Date: 2008-02-13
This particular edition, is the perfect one. Comfortably large size, easy on the eyes, hardbound is elegant and somehow I found it very easy to position it anyways I wanted, whether I was sitting upright with the book on the desk, or when in travel with the book on my lap, lying on my side with the book on the left. I thought this is important to mention , now ofcourse to the content..
The higlight of this edition is the illustration collection by Sydney Paget, as they appeared when it was first published. It is significant to read the stories with Sydney Paget's illustrations, since Sydney Paget practically defined the way Sherlock Holmes appeared. though Conan Doyle's descriptins can lead one to visualize Holmes, it was Sydney who set it on paper. and the fact that he was working along with Conan Doyle, brings in the authenticity and approval of the visual representation of the stories. Sydney Paget ofcourse is a master illustrator, with fascinating black and white illustrations capturing all the drama in the stories.
The book contains,
37 short stories and a complete novel from The Strand Magazine. With all 356 original illustrations by Sidney Paget.
Stories included are
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, published in The Strand between July, 1891 and December, 1892 (12 stories);
The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. Published in The Strand as additional episodes between December, 1892 and November, 1893 (12 stories);
The Hound of the Baskervilles, published in The Strand between August, 1901 and April, 1902; and
The Return of Sherlock Holmes, published in The Strand between October, 1903 and January, 1905 (13 stories).
Simply magnificent!Review Date: 2004-07-15

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Fun Filled PhenomenonReview Date: 2008-07-31
FantasticReview Date: 2008-04-04
as gifts!! It makes a great book for bathroom reading..you can look through it again and again with great amusement! Enjoy!
PEEPSReview Date: 2008-03-09
Hilarious!Review Date: 2006-07-28
The only thing I didn't like about it was the section about Runyoun Peep Jones. I found it a bit inapropriate. Over All, I give it five stars. It was a very good book.
I love how a guinea pig is their school mascot.Review Date: 2006-12-09
Not only is it full of hilarious pictures (like a rendering of the painting "The Scream" with a yellow peep doing the screaming) but it has plenty of text to keep you engaged with the book for a while. Although perusing the book for its photos is a riot in itself. Also, there are several storylines--the peeps' field trip to the museum, Father peep having to pull himself together for work after slightly melting in his cup of coffee, and of course the mystery at the center of the book--so you always wonder what's on the next page.
One of my faves is a pictures of two peeps with a (human-sized) yearbook. One of them says something like, "I love old yearbooks." The other replies, "Dang, how do we open it?"
Why is this so funny? I don't know, it just is!

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Photoshop CS3 for Forensics ProfessionalsReview Date: 2008-02-29
Any one who is interested in this profession, law enforcement and private, must have this book. Even if you already are an FVA professional, this book is an excellant reference source.
Best Photoshop Book Ever!Review Date: 2008-04-18
Well doneReview Date: 2007-09-29
This book both improved my workflow and my abilities to enhance images. The pratical exercises hit home the finer points.
I would compare this book to a "Forensic Photoshop" course costing much more, well done!
Should be on the shelf of every forensic imaging professional!Review Date: 2008-03-06
Part 2, "The Digital Darkroom", and Part 3, "Image Analysis and Enhancement", are detailed instructions regarding Photoshop's settings, filters, and the multitude of related processes to achieve optimum imaging results. Included with the book is a CD-ROM contianing sample images to work with when going through the tutorials, as well as some free scripts and trial plugin's.
I've been using Photoshop for several years now in my Forensic Video workflow, as well as personally for Graphic and Web design projects. This book has already proven to be the single most valuable reference for me pertaining to the use of Photoshop in either setting. It's also probably the smartest investment I've made in quite some time.
Great job GeorgeReview Date: 2007-10-17
Great job George!
Cheers,
Jim Hoerricks
[...]

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The Way We Were Review Date: 2005-09-15
A must for anyone from So Shore or who grew up in the 50s & 60sReview Date: 2005-08-17
IF YOU'VE LIVED IN CHICAGO'S SOUTH SHOREReview Date: 2004-10-07
If you've LIVED thru the 50's and the 60's ...
Or if you just LIKE toys, the retail business with a good story ...
Read this book!
I laughed and I cried as I read the history of Wee Folk's customers personal experiences, a murder trial and the history of my favorite toys, all artfully written by the daughter of Wee Folk's store owners. This would make a great gift for someone who was familiar with Chicago's South Shore neighborhoods.
What an experience!Review Date: 2005-01-01
Murder at the Toystore: The Never-Before-Told Story Review Date: 2004-10-06
Carol Owens Campbell


FascinatingReview Date: 2008-07-04
Excellent realismReview Date: 2007-01-11
I found the book very hard to put down, and was extremely happy to have found a book of this genre that would be exciting but wouldn't ask me to suspend disbelief too much.
The ending was good, although I must admit that I would have to go over the book again to figure out how everything fits together--it does get a bit complicated toward the end and the author could have done a slightly better job explaining. Mercifully, the ending is not far-fetched like those of so many other books of this genre.
This author's style is like that of Le Carre in many ways.
Guantanamo , a review of The Prisoner of Guantanamo Review Date: 2006-11-05
The ending was far-fetched. However, the discription of Guantanamo and the personnel who worked there was good. I liked it.
Remember, it was a story. I wonder how much of it is true?
Back in Form!Review Date: 2007-09-23
A dark, absorbing thrillerReview Date: 2007-07-25
A sense of foreboding hangs over the narrative from its start: "On the first day of his transition from captor to captive, Revere Falk stood barefoot on a starlit lawn at 4 a.m., still naively confident of his place among those who asked the questions and hoarded the secrets."
FBI interrogator Falk, an Arabic speaker, has just come from a nearly break-through session with his primary prisoner, a young Yemeni who has been slowly opening up to him. Furious after a CIA officer thoughtlessly interrupted the session, Falk is pacing his lawn when the MPs arrive to enlist his help in tracking down a missing sergeant.
Come morning, the young man's body washes ashore on the Cuban side of the fence, which, given the beach position of his neatly stacked belongings and the normal course of currents, is impossible. The military writes it off as an accident but Falk persists, sure the man was murdered.
The tense, murky atmosphere of turf battles, paranoia, rivalries and distrust heightens as a shadowy trio from Washington arrives (including an old buddy of Falk's). An Arabic-speaking interrogator - the Arabic speakers are universally mistrusted - is arrested and rumors begin to fly.
Falk's attitude toward the place, like his attitude to so much else, is clear-sighted but ambivalent. He vehemently disagrees with harsh interrogation tactics - mostly because he sees them as useless - and had complained about them to the mainland brass, but when nothing was done he backed off.
A loner with secrets of his own, Falk knows what it's like to be bullied and manipulated. He thinks his lover Pam, a fellow interrogator, might be the real thing, but also knows it might also just be proximity. Though he left his Deer Isle, Maine, home years before and never looked back, Falk has kept his love of the sea and relaxes best in a boat, which is also the only safe place to have a private conversation.
Fesperman, a journalist who reported on Gitmo for the "Baltimore Sun," captures the feel of a military base on foreign, hostile soil; a place contained by water and fencing, a prison enclosing a prison, a toe of an island bathed in stultifying heat and humidity, with too little to do, no place to go, too few women, and too many secrets.
Though the novel builds to a fabulous crescendo of action at the end, Fesperman relies more on crafty maneuverings, dirty tricks and political double-dealing for suspense. He immerses the reader in this sick, dull and dangerous place and fully allies us with Falk as he picks his way through a growing minefield; eyes wide open in the murk.
Masterfully written, timely and wholly absorbing, this is another winner from a writer who has been delivering thoughtful, insightful, suspenseful novels since he first immersed readers in war torn Sarajevo with homicide detective Vlado Petric in "Lie in the Dark."

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Wonderful second entry into this seriesReview Date: 2008-06-23
GREAT READ!Review Date: 2000-10-01
Mystery fans, look here!Review Date: 2002-06-30
Questionable Remains is my favorite of the series, since it seamlessly blends a modern mystery with one hundreds of years old. The details are fascinating, and Lindsey Chamberlain is a protagonist to celebrate -- she's smart, resourceful, doesn't take any guff from anyone, yet she's not SuperWoman or perpetually angry, like the aforementioned Kay Scarpetta, whom I have grown to dislike intensely.
My only complaint would be that Ms. Connor cannot possibly write as fast as I can read. Next book, please!!
Multi-level murderReview Date: 2000-07-06
The ultimate cold case fileReview Date: 2005-03-10

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Race TraitorsReview Date: 2005-03-18
Peace, Love and SoulReview Date: 2005-03-15
Mark Davis does an outstanding job reconsturcting the era and giving us some insight as to what it was like for a working black policeman. Not the hollywood, rebellious, anti-establishment black policeman stereotype, just a hard working stiff trying his best to do the right thing for the right reasons. A guy who has to endure the dichotomy of sometimes being called an "Uncle Tom" by the community he loves while still not being fully accepted by his white brothers in blue. Mark Davis walked that walk, talked that talk, and now, wrote that book. Do yourself a favor and pick up a copy of "Race Traitors". Peace, Love and Soul.
Realistic,thought provoking,entertaining,well thought out!!!Review Date: 2005-03-08
in a very insiteful way with out becomming a baby moma daddy drama opra wndfrey hug a tree counsel session.This was not a soap opra this was realism accurately depicted.This book also was interesting in its study into the social study aspect of the times...without becomming a dry text book pulpit preaching look at the wrong the world does to create it own monster platform that would have turned off any reader. Obviously there was intensive reasearch done. The struggles the detectives had with their relationships,alcohalism,sleepnessdays,frusrtation with the legal system,prior emotional baggage(pre -cop),were all explored and the author did it in such a way not to debase his charectors. I cannot accurately describe in writing the proper accolades this book deserves if there is any book that needs reading this would be it!
The worst job in the worldReview Date: 2007-07-30
the Blackstone Rangers against the Devil's Disciples. The homicide rate is
climbing and the victims are black males between the ages of 15 and 24.
Detectives Aristotle Ashford and Myles Sivad are on the job with the Gang
Intelligence Unit. Myles is a bit upset with his partner, Aristotle, also
known as DoubleA, for his seeming hatred of young black men but as they get
deeper into gang territory and more and more young men die, Myles has his
own problems with the job. Will he be forced to break the law to enforce the
law? Eventually, because of their ability to bring gang members to justice,
Myles and DoubleA become targets.
Mark Davis has created a real thriller in RACE TRAITORS. It has suspense,
romance, tension and some interesting political views. It is easy to
identify with Myles and his partner as they travel through the ghettos and
the police stations. It shouts for a sequel. It was a very interesting read
and those who love mysteries will find it very appealing.
Reviewed by Alice Holman
of The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers
review of race traitorsReview Date: 2005-03-04
An extremely exciting and suspenseful novel. This book has it all: tension, complex characters, sex, violence, and a moving plot. What really makes this book stand out is the way it is guided by music--Jazz music. The infusion of jazz, which becomes a character itself, is a delightful force in the book. Davis' insights into police procedures seem genuine and authentic--as does his understanding and explanations of gang life. Moreover, his development of the characters' battle with morality and justice--of being true to their people while being officers of the law--make this an experience where you'll find yourself rereading pages. All of this is coupled with Davis' obvious flare for humor and dead-on Chicago lingo. At times, the book serves as a history map of Chicago's South Side and its people. This was a really enjoyable book. I can't wait to read the next one. I look forward to this author becoming a mainstay in this genre.

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Compelling, compassionate, committedReview Date: 2004-03-03
Besides telling three compelling and hair-raising tales, Marissa shares aloud the unspoken rules of the courtroom, and offers appreciative and insightful looks into the lives of law enforcement professionals, and denizens of South Central LA and the gay demimonde of Hollywood.
As a skillful storyteller, she is compassionate without becoming maudlin, and righteous without losing her sense of humor.
I am looking forward to her next book, which I understand is under way!
Justice with a heartReview Date: 2004-02-10
Ready for Ms. BattReview Date: 2004-02-06
A great read, colorful, fast paced and real...I loved it.
An Intriguing Picture...Review Date: 2004-08-25
Awesome True Crime BookReview Date: 2004-08-10

This book is GOOD.Review Date: 2006-02-23
I will admit I had picked it up then put it down again because I wasn't in the right mood to read it; but once I picked it back up and finished it, I realized the ending alone was worth reading the somewhat slow beginning.
I won't even talk about the plot. To give any details to this book would be unjust to any person who will have the great pleasure of picking it up one day.
Just know you will be knocked over the head by Rogers' denouement.
Ultra creepy!Review Date: 2006-05-25
Rogers was a much better writer than some of today's authors who think that gore and perversion are the only way to scare readers, and that we can only handle one and a half page chapters or our puny little attention spans will collapse.
They should all have to read this book--so subtle, so creepy. I promise you will never forget the crazed little sawtooth killer--the hair on my arms is standing up as I type--if you buy this book you will not regret it!!!
Don't Think Twice-- Read It!Review Date: 2005-11-16
Best suspense thriller ever...EVER!Review Date: 2003-07-18
I had never heard of the author before and was merely looking for something to pass the time. It didn't pass much time, because once I started reading I couldn't put it down, and only took me one day to finish.
Joel Townsley Rogers puts you, neƩ, throws you right in the middle of a first-person account of this murder mystery that unfolds in one day. The story and subsequent mystery slowly unravels as he takes you back in time, revealing the characters and the events leading up to the day in which the story is told.
You start guessing and wondering, painting your own mental images of the characters and surroundings desribed with meticulous attention detail.
There are clues throughout the book, and careful reading is required. Read it again and again, and more clues are revealed.
As far as endings to any book are concerned, they're pretty imprtant, so I won't divulge any details. I will say this though...be prepared!
This is whodunnit to the very end, and even though the ending has never changed in the 7 times that I've read it...I'm reading it again for the 8th time right now.
Enjoy and share
Rod Serling Meets HitchcockReview Date: 2006-02-11

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I loved the bookReview Date: 2006-05-11
It was well written and had the power to shock and disturb.
Full of atmosphere-it combined wit,emotion and elaborate detail to create an absorbing read.
A genuine page turnerReview Date: 2006-05-07
Crisp,well paced thrillerReview Date: 2006-05-06
The author writes without cliches whilst showing a genius for detail.
A good read with a clever plot. The narrative is laced with a unique wit and musing on the minor perplexities of life.
Recommended!
A terrifically stylish debut novel...Review Date: 2006-05-06
Disturbingly original!
A taut and gripping tale...Review Date: 2006-05-02
Related Subjects: Research Prisons Prevention Books and Authors News and Media Criminals Abuse Murder Trials Victims Kidnapping Organized Crime
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I use the quotation marks advisedly. Part of the secret of Holmes' near-mystical powers is that Doyle consciously controls how much of the mystery he reveals in advance, so that in most stories even an aspiring Holmes can not dope out the mysteries based on the information given. This reveals more about the author than the stories, making Doyle interesting enough to make me want to know more, so I read Martin Booth's The Doctor and the Detective: A Biography of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and Doyle's life story is every bit as interesting as the ones he creates.