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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Amazing!!! As quoted from other reviews: A Masterpiece of Time!Review Date: 2008-03-03
OUTSTANDINGReview Date: 2005-12-12
--the photo often described as Lincoln's last portrait was
actually taken in February, 1865. This book shows you the
real last one.
--Booth didn't bore the peephole in the door to Lincoln's
box or make the bar obstructing the door leading to the
corridor of the boxes - that had been done some time before
by or for Lincoln's guards.
--Booth's illegitimacy preyed on his mind as a youth - perhaps shaping his character in a perverse way. One must
wonder about the same effect in some other, modern day
individuals with the same origin (Fidel Castro, Ted Bundy
and a recent US President).
-- Most telling are the widely varied descriptions of events by eyewitnesses. The author evaluates these and tells you the most likely version. Here is proof that circumstantial evidence
(including letters, bloodstains, etc.) is often more reliable than such eyewitnesses.
A minor issue - it is mentioned that the entry in Booth's diary for the day of the assassination states he cried "Sic
semper" - omitting "tyrannis" - and that he may have done so
because he didn't know how to spell tyrannis. It is, however, pointed out that he had asked about this spelling beforehand
(so he knew it). Also, Booth was undoubtedly familiar with the
6th verse of the Confederate song, "Maryland, My Maryland," which runs "Sic semper! 'tis the proud refrain" and he might have used the shortened phrase in his diary just as an abbreviation. Incidentally, as the book states, Lincoln's wallet contained several newspaper clippings. Not mentioned is that among these were laudatory articles. Lincoln had been the
subject of many cruel newspaper attacks and it is pathetic that even a great man apparently needed to know that someone approved of him.
FascinatingReview Date: 2000-02-12
Great Image of The End of A Great LeaderReview Date: 2000-08-06
Excellent!Review Date: 2001-07-17
The book reads very much like a novel but is obviously very well researched with plenty of reference material documented via footnotes throughout. The author knows the subject well and is careful to note when conclusions not fully supported by documented research are drawn. The result is wonderfully readable and highly informative unlike many other accounts of that day.

Survival at seaReview Date: 2008-04-07
One Impacting BookReview Date: 2007-11-27
As someone who has a deep abiding faith in God, I found his brother-in-law Jim's approach to faith foolish, ridgid and destructive. I think that says it all.
Bob still bears some of the effects of this terrible experience, but he has gone on to live and love life. Bob is a man of honor who loves those around him and still loves the water... and he is a pretty good fisherman too.
Quick ReadReview Date: 2007-06-13
UnputdownableReview Date: 2007-03-12
A Great Book!Review Date: 2007-06-17
Bob Timinenko's courage and unbelievable strength was such an inspiration. On the other hand, I became so frustrated with Jim Fisher that, as another reviewer has stated, I wanted to dive into the book and shake some sence into him!
That is the way this book is. Once you start reading, you will become so involved with the lives of these three people, that you will not be able to put it down. It is way more than just another true adventure story.
I highly recommend it!

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Lawyers, Guns, and Money---Warren Zevon 1978Review Date: 2007-10-12
A well-written, fast-paced, and easy-to-read novel surrounded by suspense, humor, and......music! Mr. Lewis hits a home-run with his first publication. He easily gets my vote for "Rookie of the Year."
Jerry H.
Dirty Water---Standells 1966
Most enjoyable read in a long time!Review Date: 2007-09-13
Think of a cross between Carl Hiaasen, Elmore Leonard, and John Grisham. And don't worry if you aren't a baseball card collector... sure, baseball cards play a big part of the story, but I could care less about them and loved the book.
Great readReview Date: 2007-09-03
Fast moving and FunReview Date: 2007-08-23
His style of writing, Malenglish, is built for the generation that came of age in the 80's. Or, for that matter, anyone that enjoyed or still enjoys, music and movies from that wonderful era.
I highly recommend this book and can't wait for his next one.
Funny and EntertainingReview Date: 2007-08-05

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Robert BuckReview Date: 2007-09-10
Hard hitting, fast paced adventure!Review Date: 2007-08-15
Great read from an emerging authorReview Date: 2008-05-06
Captivating, Exciting, Stimulating, Just Plain Sensational!!!Review Date: 2007-07-02
Exciting StoryReview Date: 2007-06-05

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A Matter of TimeReview Date: 2008-07-07
Amazing story!Review Date: 2007-07-03
I had the privilege to meet the author in person. He is the most humble, laid-back, and friendly person I've ever met. If you enjoy this book, please come back and write a nice review here.
The moral of the story? A very strong one...Review Date: 2006-06-21
Written in a fast paced, Robert Loodlum-speed drama, this book takes the reader through the life of Don Kirchner, from one struggle to the next, reaching the very bottom, but with an ultimate triumph at the end. A true story, and as another reviewer pointed out, an instant classic.
A Great Achievement...Review Date: 2000-11-20
How to Stay Up All NightReview Date: 2000-11-19

Miss Marple: The Complete Short StoriesReview Date: 2008-05-05
Mis Marple's the bestReview Date: 2007-07-29
Miss Marple Short StoriesReview Date: 2006-11-13
"Never say to yourself that anyone is above suspicion."Review Date: 2007-06-02
An earlier reviewer quoted a short passage from "An Autobiography" by Christie. I shall quote a little more extensively from the same source: "Miss Marple," wrote Dame Agatha, "insinuated herself so quickly into my life that I hardly noticed her arrival. I wrote a series of six short stories for a magazine, and chose six people whom I thought might meet once a week in a small village and describe some unsolved crime. I started with Miss Jane Marple, the sort of old lady who would have been rather like some of my grandmother's Ealing cronies--old ladies whom I met in so many villages where I had gone to stay as a girl. Miss Marple was not in any way a picture of my grandmother; she was far more fussy and spinsterish than my grandmother ever was. But one thing she did have in common with her--though a cheerful person, she always expected the worst of everyone and everything, and was, with almost frightening accuracy, usually proved right...."
Later, she added, "Miss Marple was born a the age of sixty-five to seventy--which, as with Poirot, proved most unfortunate, because she was gong to have to last a long time in my life. If I had had any second sight, I would have provided myself with a precocious schoolboy as my first detective; then he would have grown old with me."
The first sextet of magazine stories were published in the late 1920s but did not achieve the dignity of book publication until 1932, two years after the publication of "Murder at the Vicarage," the first novel to feature Miss Marple.
The 1932 volume contained the first sextet of stories mentioned by Christie in her autobiography, plus a second sextet and one more story to provide a satisfactorily ominous title for the collection, "The Thirteen Problems." (In the US, the book appeared--less happily--as "The Tuesday Club Murders.") Christie wrote seven more short stories for Miss Marple. They all are included in this volume. The later stories are good enough, but Miss Marple had so grown in stature that her true milieu was the full-length mystery novel.
I suggest that special note be taken of the tenth story, "A Christmas Tragedy." This story represents a sea change in Miss Jane Marple. In all prior appearances she had been a mere device, a voice through which the author could resolve her little puzzles. With this story, the fully developed, elderly, tough as nails, knitting Nemesis of the novels emerges.
These twenty stories are competent, if not brilliant. No-one, least of all Agatha Christie, would call them literature. They are amusements, clever puzzles set to dialogue. As such, most of them are splendid. There are a couple of minor misfires, one in which the solution to a coded message is in English when by the logic of the story it should have been in German, another in which Christie chose to emulate the mechanically-oriented stories common in those days among the works of her less-talented contemporaries. A classic Christie work incorporates some deceptively simple example of what might be called mental sleight-of-hand. Stories that depend on gimmicked mechanical implements and the like seem somehow beneath Dame Agatha's dignity.
Reading these stories quickly demonstrates that Agatha Christie was born one of nature's great re-cyclers. Dame Aggie had a strong tendency to ... ahem, quote from herself when a good plot was involved. For those who would put a more positive spin on the simple facts, then it might be said that within these stories may be found seeds that later sprouted into full-length mystery classics such as "A Murder is Announced" and "Murder Under the Sun."
The collection, I was surprised to discover, was dedicated to Leonard and Katherine Woolley. Sir Leonard Woolley was a great archeologist who famously excavated the ancient city of Ur in Sumeria, a land that would one day come to be known as southern Iraq. He became a media superstar when he dug down through the artifact-laden soil of Ur to find a very thick layer almost entirely free of man-made remains, and beneath that yet another layer of artifacts. Woolley attributed the break in the artifact layers to an extensive flood--or as he suggested a bit prematurely and the newspapers shouted loudly to all the world, not a flood but The Flood. When the shouting was at its height, Christie was already a world-famous author and an enthusiastic traveler. She visited the dig at Ur and stayed on for some time to lend a hand. There she met and fell in love with archeologist Max Mallowan, whom she married in the same year that she published "Murder at the Vicarage."
Doubtless, anyone who has slogged this far is wondering why I've wandered so far off-track with all this biographical blather. The reason is simply that I am astonished to see Katherine Woolley's name in the dedication. When Christie arrived, Lady Woolley was very much in residence at her husband's archeological site. She regarded herself as Queen of all she surveyed and she went out of her way to make sure that the upstart mystery novelist knew it. Christie got on with Leonard Woolley, but she simply could not abide his wife. In one of her novels, she made a perfectly obvious caricature of Lady Woolley into the murderess. When she transformed the book into a stage play, Christie slyly converted her novel's villainess into her play's comic relief.
This collection of the twenty Marple short stories are, as I've said, not literature themselves, nor even necessarily vintage Christie. Nevertheless, they are clever, entertaining and an invaluable memento of one of the great literary characters of the Twentieth Century.
Five stars for Agatha, for Jane and for St Mary Mead.
Dear Aunt Jane's Shorter Cases.Review Date: 2004-12-31
Although Christie herself considered Miss Marple her favorite creation - preferred even over the prim and proper Belgian with the many "little grey cells," of whose exploits she occasionally tired and whom she brought back again and again chiefly because of her audience's undying demand - there are only twelve Miss Marple novels and twenty short stories: while no small feat in any other author's body of work, just over one tenth of the lifetime output of the writer justifiedly dubbed The Queen of Crime.
This compilation unites the twenty short stories revolving around St. Mary Mead's elderly village sleuth, beginning with the canon of originally six and, after an expansion for republication in book form, later thirteen stories which, in addition to the novel "A Murder at the Vicarage" (1930) introduced Miss Marple to the world; a series of unsolved problems told by her guests one Tuesday night, to be followed by six further problems narrated during a similar gathering at the home of village squire Colonel Bantry and his wife Dolly, about a year later. In attendance on those two nights are a number of people who make recurring appearances next to Miss Marple; first and foremost her doting nephew - thriller novelist Raymond West - and retired Scotland Yard Commissioner Sir Henry Clithering, as well as village solicitor Petherick, and of course the Bantrys (who will move center stage, much to their embarrassment, in "A Body in the Library," 1942); furthermore Raymond's new flame, artist Joyce (later reincarnated as his wife Joan), a doctor, a clergyman, and a well-known actress. Later stories also feature appearances of Miss Marple's niece Diana "Bunch" Harmon, married to the vicar of Chipping Cleghorn, a village not unlike St. Mary Mead (see "A Murder Is Announced," 1950), St. Mary Mead's Dr. Haydock, several maids called Gladys, as well as Inspectors Slack and Craddock and Colonel Melchett of Melchester C.I.D. and village Constable Palk; and of course the usual cast of other unique characters, many of whom could just as well figure in one of the elderly lady's "village parallels," those seemingly unimportant events summing up her knowledge of life, on which she unfailingly draws in unmasking even the cleverest killer. Avid Christie readers will also recognize certain other character types, plot snippets, settings and other features here and there; for Dame Agatha was known to draw repeatedly on devices she found to have worked before, and she tended to use her short stories as mini-laboratories for elements later expanded on in novels. Caveat, lector, of premature conclusions, however, for Christie was equally known to throw in a little extra twist in such cases: what is a real clue in one instance may well be a red herring in another and vice versa, and one story's innocent bystander may easily be the next story's murderer.
"The Thirteen Problems" (1932, a/k/a "The Tuesday Club Murders"):
"The Tuesday Night Club:" Sir Henry Clithering opens the evening with the case of a woman's mysterious poisoning by arsenic.
"The Idol House of Astarte:" A man inexplicably dies after a costume party's nightly excursion to a pagan temple.
"Ingots of Gold:" Raymond West tells about a treasure hunt, sunken ships and murder on the Cornish coast.
"The Bloodstained Pavement:" Joyce and the case of a drowned wife in a Cornish watering place called Rathole.
"Motive vs. Opportunity:" Mr. Petherick's tale of a will that mysteriously vanishes from its sealed envelope.
"The Thumb Mark of St. Peter:" Miss Marple's story how she quashed rumors about the sudden death of her niece Mabel's husband.
"The Blue Geranium:" Opening the second round of mysteries, Colonel Bantry's narration about a prophecy involving death and three uncharacteristically blue flowers.
"The Companion:" Two English ladies go on a holiday in Tenerife, but only one returns home alive.
"The Four Suspects:" Sir Henry Clithering's account of the murder of a retired secret agent.
"A Christmas Tragedy:" Having failed to prevent a murder, Miss Marple is all the more eager to unmask the murderer.
"The Herb of Death:" Mrs. Bantry's gifts as a storyteller, a serving of sage and foxglove, and a charming young girl's unexpected death.
"The Affair at the Bungalow:" Double-dealings, charades and mischief on stage and off, just outside of London.
"Death by Drowning:" A village girl "in trouble" finds a desperate solution - or does she?
From "The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories" (1939):
"Miss Marple Tells a Story:" Miss Marple assists Mr. Petherick in the case of a client accused of having murdered his wife.*
From "Three Blind Mice and Other Stories" (1950):
"Strange Jest:" A rich iconoclast's final joke - at the expense of his heirs?*
"Tape-Measure Murder:" Miss Marple's knowledge of village life and human nature (once more) corrects the all-too straightforward path of Inspector Slack's investigation of an elderly lady's murder.*
"The Case of the Caretaker:" Dr. Haydock's story about a rural rascal, a poor little rich girl, an old estate and its grumpy caretaker.*
"The Case of the Perfect Maid:" Domestic service and burglary in a Victorian estate-turned-apartment building.*
From "The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding" (1960):
"Greenshaw's Folly" (republished in "Double Sin," below): A reverse-locked-room mystery at an eccentrically-built country estate.
From "Double Sin and Other Stories" (1961):
"Sanctuary" (first published 1954, a/k/a "The Man on the Chancel Steps"): The last secret of a man found dying on Chipping Cleghorn's church steps.*
_______________________________
*Republished posthumously in "Miss Marple's Final Cases" (1979).
_______________________________
Also recommended:
Murder at the Vicarage: A Miss Marple Mystery (Agatha Christie Collection)
Agatha Christie: Five Complete Miss Marple Novels (Avenel Suspense Classics)
Marple Classic Mysteries (Caribbean Mystery/4:50 from Paddington/Moving Finger/Nemesis/At Bertram's Hotel/Murder at Vicarage/Sleeping Murder/They Do It with Mirrors/Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side)
Miss Marple - 3 Feature Length Mysteries (The Body in the Library / A Murder Is Announced / A Pocketful of Rye)
The Mirror Crack'd

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Too many get away !Review Date: 2007-11-08
Is this fiction? I have had boyfriends like this!Review Date: 2003-04-25
What a Great Comeback!!Review Date: 2003-04-23
This well-written story is bizarre, and it's shocking that one man was capable of so much deception. This is kind of similar to "Catch Me if You Can" in that a guy cheats people out of money, but different in that the main character in this story is Catholic and acts so almighty while he is cheating people. Plus, this guy targets mostly women. I sort of feel sorry for that Northrop Grumman heiress he married, because now she's stuck with him and this book must be scandalizing to such a prestigious family. It seems like the author is pretty smart, so I'm a bit surprised she didn't see through this shady character sooner. She sounds like a nice person who put her trust into the wrong man! But like she said, she indeed made lemonade out of a lemon! Good for her!!
CON MEN BEWAREReview Date: 2003-04-12
This is a sensational book, unlike any I've read, that offers incredible understanding into the mentality of con artists.
The author provides fresh and candid advice through her own experiences on how to protect yourself and love ones from becoming a con mans next victim.
Finally a book by an author that truly cares about the reader.
Has "Mr. Integrity" shown up in your life?Review Date: 2003-04-10
Valuable techniques given to "STOP BEING A VICTIM OF OTHERS ACTIONS!"
Relationships teach us the hard way, most of the time, and this
story parallels with real life situations.
How many of you have been the victim of someone you loved? How many times did you
suffer because of someones lack of
"integrity"? I believe it is
time to stop this nonsense and move to a higher ground with
all relationships! This
book shows you all the steps to awaken
from denial and see the truth about someone immediately!!
Several personal relationships
came to mind for me while reading
this book, and I took the opportunity to heal my issues from past mistakes! READING
THIS BOOK WILL AWAKEN YOUR SENSES AND PREVENT FRAUD, LIES, AND DECEPTION FROM COMING TO YOU!

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funny and delightfulReview Date: 2008-06-09
Mrs. Jeffries Is a WinnerReview Date: 2008-04-20
Another great Emily Brightwell mysteryReview Date: 2007-12-08
Wonderful Victorian cozy!Review Date: 2008-02-04
23rd in a series--and a most delightful cozyReview Date: 2007-10-29
Each with their own special connections, Mrs. Jeffries and her below-stairs friends and fellow workers secretly help their employer, Inspector Gerald Witherspoon, solve his latest murder. He can use the help. Christmas is just around the corner and his superiors want the murder of wealthy Stephen Whitfield solved before December 25.
With Witherspoon's nemesis Inspector Nevins waiting in the wings to see him fail and each lead exonerating a suspect, everyone must work harder at pursuing leads and solving the murder.
Emily Brightwell uses slight of hand to build intrigue from the beginning of the story. She skillfully weaves leads throughout the book. The challenge is laid down before you, but are you capable of solving the mystery before Mrs. Jeffries or Inspector Witherspoon?
Humor and romance aren't forgotten during the course of the book. In-depth descriptions of the people and places of the Victorian Era set you firmly in each scene. A pleasant surprise was the spacing used to introduce characters and their traits.
Armchair Interviews says: This is the 23rd book in a delightful series of cozy mysteries. Come, join the search and solve the mystery before the feast of St. Stephen.

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Great start for a plucky heroineReview Date: 2008-09-09
The author introduces several quirky characters to aid his plucky heroine: her mother who likes to sing rock loudly, her best friend Billy, and two police detectives who think they know more than she does, and I hope they will all stay with the series. The other main character is the city of Los Angeles, a major character as well in Bruce Kimmel's wonderful Benjamin Kritzer novels, since its geography is essential to the plot as Adriana walks and busses - she's too young to drive - from crime scene to school to students' homes to solve a crime and save a friend.
A Really Fun Read!Review Date: 2007-11-24
A new sleuth is bornReview Date: 2007-12-23
This novel is a demonstration of the values of loyalty and friendship in a very contemporary context.
A Page Turner!Review Date: 2007-11-15
Adriana is the only child of a Rock'n'Roll loving single mom (widowed); and unlike many of her credit card wielding, BMW driving classmates, living a modest life style, including dial up (GASP!) internet service and meatloaf four times a week (not counting the sandwiches for lunch)
Adriana would find school unbearable if it wasn't for her best friend, Billy, (who is openly gay, much to the disgust of the high school jocks) and her supportive journalism teacher.
When a popular classmate is murdered, Adriana's life spins out of control and she takes action to make things right.
I couldn't put this down until I reached the end, and I most probably would have started it over again if my 14 year old daughter hadn't ripped it out of my hands so she could read it!
Her take on the book?
"When the next one in the series going to be available?"
A Book For Those Who Love MysteriesReview Date: 2007-11-12

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A literary mysteryReview Date: 2001-10-29
A great plot and lots of dash and swaggerReview Date: 2002-03-10
In Murder At The Red Dog we meet up with Drew Moore, a semi-retired journalist who fled the high pressure journalism game out East for the friendlier skies of Montana. Brew's main love and commitment is to his border collie Jessie, who accompanies him on his exploits. But when Brew's friends Gil and Beth Owen are found murdered in their offices at the rear of the Red Dog, he pulls himself out of his reverie of non-commitment long enough to investigate a case the local police would like to pin on the local American-Indian, Dennis O'Brien. When the F.B.I. appear suddenly out of nowhere, Brew knows it's time to start snooping:
"'Another thing,' I said, 'why are the federales in on this? I'll tell you why. It's because there was something going on before the crimes. The FBI doesn't get into the act on mere homicide. Serial murder, yes. But there's nothing on the surface here to indicate an FBI investigation. Also, Agent Pace arrived here mere hours after the bodies are found--here in this remote location, a hundred miles from the honest-to-god airport. I say the FBI was here all along, maybe doing something else, and only coincidentally were around when the murders were committed. They've been working on something here, whatever it is, a log longer than two days.'"
Hermann is a first-rate writer, with a special facility for great dialogue. His characters come across as three-dimensional, and appeal to the reader's thirst for entertainment. Brew Moore is a wise man with a lot of charisma. He doesn't pull any punches with any of the many characters with their own agendas, and it is refreshing to see someone who can work their way through a chain of enormous injustice. Brew's dog Jessie is a rare personality herself, who adds another dimension to the story; sort of a pressure release for the reader. All in all, Murder At The Red Dog is a well-written story with a great plot and lots of dash and swagger.
A native of Kootenai Falls speaksReview Date: 2001-09-16
masterful plot twists, well written and enormously satisfying.
The Red Dog does exist in NW Montana and so does the storyline and suspense. All of my children and siblings will find copies of this book in their Christmas stockings.
Fun to ReadReview Date: 2001-09-09
Former East Coast newsman John Herrmann, owned by his own border collie Mackie, and living across the street from a saloon in backwoods Montana where they sell a t-shirt advertising Murder at the Red Dog, knows the local topography and mores well. In this meticulously crafted first novel, which is, we hope, first in a series, Herrmann has drawn mightily on that local background. Who else would know that the drink of choice in a Montana tavern is Moose Drool Brown Ale or the extent to which the pro-white anti-everything-else sentiment continues to dominate the rugged West?
Herrmann suits his tone and pacing to the novel's structure--and somehow even to the locale he so lovingly depicts. Brew Moore is a man who has found Nirvana in a new home but who still looks back over his shoulder at the life he left behind, wondering if he's entirely done with it. But Brew has Jessie to consider, a dog whose pastimes are split between little romps in tending sheep and sharp-toothed protection of her beloved human. At last, refreshingly, a mystery with an approach intended for adults emerges, rather a relief in a market geared to unreal characters in situations that leave truth far behind.
Strong on characterization as well as plot, Murder at the Red Dog ends with a few surprises--logical ones, given the setting. In a marketplace that prefers formula over innovation, Herrmann's tale of the contemporary West breaks away from the pack. Here's a small press author who ought to find a major following. Readers seeking a bit of depth in their entertainment must be sure to acquire this one.
City Boy Goes Country ...Review Date: 2001-09-24
The machinations of a small-town rag on which the protagonist labors are also refreshingly transcribed, as is the kindling of relationship between the young and beautiful Amy Kroll and the cantankerous journalist/leading man Drew Moore whose love interests include an old flame back East who gives good phone, the cub-reporter Kroll with her wonderful blush of femininity and Moore's sheep dog Jessie. So, yup, yup, or yip, yip, the pup as co-heroine is another literary touch that Herrmann so successfully smuggles into genre. Not just the dog, mind you, but the man's love for his dog serves to refresh plot at those rare times when it seems, well, too plotty.
Another crucial dimension of story is setting. I like, from the get-go, how Herrmann evokes place, the small Montana town and the wilderness surrounding it. I knew I was in for a good ride when I read, right at the beginning, how the train, the Burlington-Northern, "grinds slowly through, and out, and then curls east ... a two-mile long ghostly arm moving beneath the white blankets of a bed." Fog and avalanches, wildlife and weather - the writer knows his turf. In reality, he lives there, in northwest Montana, and from what I gather does his drinking at an actual saloon called the Red Dog. In fictional reality, you can't find a better guide than John Herrmann to show you around today's wild western town -- while introducing you to all its wacky characters. Murder at the Red Dog is a fine novel. Instead of making the easy reach to Grisham, read Herrmann. He gives better bang for the buck. #
Related Subjects: Research Prisons Prevention Books and Authors News and Media Criminals Abuse Murder Trials Victims Kidnapping Organized Crime
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