Sunday, July 31, 2011

Gangsters, Swindlers, Killers, and Thieves: The Lives and Crimes of Fifty American Villains

Gangsters, Swindlers, Killers, and Thieves: The Lives and Crimes of Fifty American Villains Review


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Gangsters, Swindlers, Killers, and Thieves: The Lives and Crimes of Fifty American Villains Feature

Drawing on his experience in creating fictional bad guys, crime novelist Lawrence Block surveys the underside of American history through fifty of its most infamous characters. Some, like Jesse James, Bonnie Parker, and Joe Colombo, led a life of crime; others, like John Wilkes Booth and John White Webster, committed one notorious act. Some, like Pretty Boy Floyd or the elusive thief Railroad Bill, have become folk heroes, whether or not the real details of their lives matched the myths they inspired. Others, like Ed Gein and Ted Bundy, will be forever reviled.
Block introduces each biography with a writer's eye for character and a good story. He begins the book with a short essay that considers how Americans have defined and regarded villains through history.
The biographies, culled from the pages of the American National Biography and illustrated with archival photographs, describe each villain's background, exploits, and eventual fate--often with unexpected details. The convicted killer Nathan Leopold, for example, became the administrator of a leprosy hospital after his parole. The gangster Dutch Schultz was known not only for his bootlegging expertise but also for his cheap, ill-fitting clothes. The stagecoach bandit Black Bart fancied himself a poet (or, as he put it, "PO8"). And when outlaw Bill Doolin finally met his end, only a rusting buggy axle marked his grave.
Ideal for readers of true crime, crime fiction, and history, Gangsters, Swindlers, Killers, and Thieves brings a fresh perspective to American's fascination with crime and its perpetrators.


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Saturday, July 30, 2011

The Enigma Woman: The Death Sentence of Nellie May Madison (Women in the West)

The Enigma Woman: The Death Sentence of Nellie May Madison (Women in the West) Review


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The Enigma Woman: The Death Sentence of Nellie May Madison (Women in the West) Feature

“Crack shot.” “Enigma woman.” “Good with ponies and pistols.” “A much-married woman.”


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Friday, July 29, 2011

Debs: his life, writings and speeches, with a department of appreciations ...

Debs: his life, writings and speeches, with a department of appreciations ... Review


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Debs: his life, writings and speeches, with a department of appreciations ... Feature

Originally published in 1905. This volume from the Cornell University Library's print collections was scanned on an APT BookScan and converted to JPG 2000 format by Kirtas Technologies. All titles scanned cover to cover and pages may include marks, notations and other marginalia present in the original volume.


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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Lawyers against Labor: From Individual Rights to Corporate Liberalism (Working Class in American History)

Lawyers against Labor: From Individual Rights to Corporate Liberalism (Working Class in American History) Review


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Lawyers against Labor: From Individual Rights to Corporate Liberalism (Working Class in American History) Feature


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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

All The Stars Came Out That Night

All The Stars Came Out That Night Review


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All The Stars Came Out That Night Feature

In the tradition of iconic literary baseball novels such as The Natural, Bang the Drum Slowly, and The Brothers K comes a mythic tale about 1930s stars Dizzy Dean, Satchel Paige, and the greatest game ever played.

Narrated by gossip columnist Walter Winchell, All the Stars Came Out That Night paints a vivid and moving portrait of Depression-era baseball—its raw joy and elegance but also its cursing, boozing, womanizing, and racism, and its odd relationships with bootleggers, racketeers, Hollywood stars, kidnappers, and even Dominican dictators.

The date was October 20, 1934, just days after Diz’s Cardinals won the World Series. The place was Boston’s Fenway Park, under portable lights. The money behind it was Henry Ford’s, who yearned to see an all-white (and non-Jewish) team defeat the black all-stars. And the force behind it all was Clarence Darrow, the legal genius who pulled the political levers to make it happen. For Diz’s team there was Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Shoeless Joe Jackson (overweight and still banned from the game), and a lanky minor- leaguer named Joe DiMaggio. Paige’s all-stars featured Josh Gibson, Cool Papa Bell (the fastest man from first to third), Turkey Stearnes, and Buck Leonard. With a gimlet eye for historical detail and a passionate love for the game, Kevin King chronicles this epic game between Diz’s and Satch’s all-stars—and the epic struggle to put it together. No trophies or championships were on the line, only the two most important things in life to any ballplayer—respect and redemption.


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Monday, July 25, 2011

Beating the Devil's Game: A History of Forensic Science and Criminal Investigation

Beating the Devil's Game: A History of Forensic Science and Criminal Investigation Review


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Beating the Devil's Game: A History of Forensic Science and Criminal Investigation Feature

First time in paperback— essential reading for the millions of fans of CSI and Cold Case Files.

Katherine Ramsland, a renowned expert in criminology, traces the story of the evolution of forensic science––from thirteenth-century Chinese studies of decomposition through the flowering of science during the Renaissance and its veritable explosion during the era of Newtonian physics, to the marvels of the present day and beyond. Along the way, she introduces readers to such forensic pioneers as the father of toxicology; the criminalturned- detective who founded the Parisian Sureté; and trailblazers like William Bass whose integrated program in entomology, anthropology, and pathology at the Forensic Anthropology Center has galvanized the field.


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Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Cost of Copper

The Cost of Copper Review


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The Cost of Copper Feature

One of America’s most famous – and most deadly – labor strikes occurred in The Copper Country of Michigan’s Keweenaw Peninsula in 1913, and its major events are described through the eyes of sixteen-year old Emilia Rytilahti. Emilia and her younger sister Heli are first-generation American born Finns, who see and personally experience the prejudice of the era against their family and their kinsmen. Emilia comes of age as her world of Copper Island, indeed, the entire Keweenaw Peninsula is shattered during the year of one of the most tumultuous strikes in the history of the labor movement. Eyesight, arms and legs, friendship, community, dignity, and life itself are among the costs of a metal that was mined in its purest natural form ever discovered on earth. Emilia and Heli Rytilahti pay an awful price in the final tally for The Cost of Copper.


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Saturday, July 23, 2011

Keep A Happy Ghost, Or None

Keep A Happy Ghost, Or None Review


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Keep A Happy Ghost, Or None Feature

Confronted by an election campaign for which he has no heart, Sheriff Conor Gifford moves to Richmond where he joins two old friends, Governor Graham Martin and Attorney General Samantha Darrow. On the very day that he assumes command of his new organization, the Office of Special Investigations, an assassin’s bullet kills Martin and Darrow. Shunted aside by the Commander of the State Police who resents the very existence of Gifford’s peculiar new organization, Gifford conducts a parallel investigation that leads him into the depths of Virginia politics where he finds himself besieged by politicians of both parties as they maneuver to attain the Commonwealth’s highest office.

Robert L. Skidmore is the author of sixteen novels.


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Thursday, July 21, 2011

Walls and Bars

Walls and Bars Review


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Walls and Bars Feature

1927. The book is dedicated To the countless thousands of my brothers and sisters who have suffered the cruel and pitiless torture and degradation of imprisonment in the jails, penitentiaries and other barbarous and brutalizing penal institutions of capitalism under our much-vaunted Christian civilization, and who in consequence now bear the ineffaceable brand of convicts and criminals, this volume is dedicated with affection and devotion by one of their number. Contents: The Relation of Society to the Convict; The Prison as an Incubator of Crime; I Become U.S. Convict, No. 9653; Sharing the Lot of Les Miserables; Transferred From My Cell to the Hospital; Visitors and Visiting; The 1920 Campaign for President; A Christmas Eve Reception; Leaving the Prison; General Prison Conditions; Poverty Populates the Prison; Creating the Criminal; How I Would Manage the Prison; Capitalism and Crime; Poverty and the Prison; Socialism and the Prison; Leaving the Prison; Prison Labor, Its Effects on Industry and Trade; Studies Behind Prison Walls; and Wasting Life.


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Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Stout Fellow: A Guide Through Nero Wolfe's World

Stout Fellow: A Guide Through Nero Wolfe's World Review


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Stout Fellow: A Guide Through Nero Wolfe's World Feature

Are you one of the millions who has spent many pleasant hours reading aboutNero Wolfeconverting the calories from his gourmet dining (albeit grudgingly) into mental energy to solve a murder? If you have traipsed through that morass of neuroses, idiosyncrasies and obsessive-compulsive behaviors, you must have questions.Did you know that while Wolfe usually tilts the scales near one-seventh of a ton, he may once have weighed less than his svelte associate, Archie Goodwin? Or how many times the "unbreakable" rules of the house are broken? Or why Fritz speaks French although he's not from France? Or how many bullet and knife wounds Wolfe carries on his normally sedentary carcass? Or what Inspector Cramer's first name is? Or how the characters evolved over the four decades of their existence?This book will provide you with the answers to those questions and a thousand others. I hope you find it satisfactory.


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