Cannonball Read 18

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Ed Gein rocked 1950s America, and has left an indelible mark that has lasted 70 years

Did You Hear What Eddie Gein Done? by Harold Schechter and Eric Powell

July 14, 2024 by ingres77 Leave a Comment

Psycho, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Silence of the Lambs, and basically the whole career of Rob Zombie owe a great deal to Ed Gein. Officially, Ed Gein was not a serial killer. Officially, he “only” killed two women: 58-year-old Bernice Worden, the owner of a hardware store, in 1957 and 51-year-old Mary Hogan, the owner of a bar, in 1954. The general baseline used to define a “serial killer” is three or more murders. But his brother, Henry, died suspiciously in 1944 following a […]

Filed Under: Featured, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, Horror, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Did You Hear What Eddie Gein Done?, Ed Gein, Eric Powell, Harold Schechter, Harold Schechter and Eric Powell, Psycho, The Silence of the Lambs, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, true crime

ingres77's CBR16 Review No:8 · Genres: Featured, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, Horror, Non-Fiction · Tags: Did You Hear What Eddie Gein Done?, Ed Gein, Eric Powell, Harold Schechter, Harold Schechter and Eric Powell, Psycho, The Silence of the Lambs, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, true crime ·
· 0 Comments

The Unforgiving Desert

Journal of the Dead by Jason Kersten

July 6, 2024 by Pooja Leave a Comment

CBR16 Bingo – Fiasco: David and Raffi’s trip into Rattlesnake Canyon is an utter fiasco from start to finish. When authorities find Raffi Kodikian barely alive four days after he and his best friend David Coughlin got lost in an desert canyon, they make a grim discovery. Raffi claims to have stabbed David to death in a mercy killing, but the police suspect the truth may be darker. It was awkward on my way out of the library with this book, because another patron, intrigued […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: adventure, cbr16bingo, friendship, Jason Kersten, mystery, nature, non fiction, survival, true crime

Pooja's CBR16 Review No:77 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: adventure, cbr16bingo, friendship, Jason Kersten, mystery, nature, non fiction, survival, true crime ·
Rating:
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June 2024 Leftovers

The First Quarry by Max Allan Collins

Kings of the Garden: The New York Knicks and Their City by Adam J. Criblez

Out On The Cutting Edge by Lawrence Block

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

Notes on Grief by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Nevada by Imogene Binnie

The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity and the Making of the Oxford Dictionary by Simon Winchester

Exalted by Anna Dorn

July 5, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

Happy Pride to all who celebrate! The First Quarry**** I was disappointed in the quality of the last couple of Quarry novels so I wasn’t expecting much…but this was good. One of his best plots and I really enjoyed it. Could’ve done without the racism. Big believer that you can show the casual racism of the past (1970s) without wallowing in it and the book does that. Otherwise, it’s good. Kings of the Garden: The New York Knicks and Their City**** Stretching a four star […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Fantasy, Fiction, History, Mystery, Non-Fiction, Sports, Suspense Tagged With: #fantasy, #history, Adam J. Criblez, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Anna Dorn, astrology, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, crime, dictionary, Exalted, grief, hip-hop, hitman, Imogene Binnie, Kings of the Garden, lawrence block, lewis carroll, LGBTQIA, los angeles, Matthew Scudder, Max Allan Collins, mystery, NBA, Nevada, New York City, New York Knicks, Notes on Grief, Out On the Cutting Edge, Quarry, rap, Simon Winchester, The First Quarry, The Professor and the Madman, trans, true crime

Jake's CBR16 Review No:99 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Fantasy, Fiction, History, Mystery, Non-Fiction, Sports, Suspense · Tags: #fantasy, #history, Adam J. Criblez, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Anna Dorn, astrology, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, crime, dictionary, Exalted, grief, hip-hop, hitman, Imogene Binnie, Kings of the Garden, lawrence block, lewis carroll, LGBTQIA, los angeles, Matthew Scudder, Max Allan Collins, mystery, NBA, Nevada, New York City, New York Knicks, Notes on Grief, Out On the Cutting Edge, Quarry, rap, Simon Winchester, The First Quarry, The Professor and the Madman, trans, true crime ·
· 0 Comments

“No one could possess a shred of doubt that Olalla’s most famous institution was the sanitarium up on the heights.”

Starvation Heights: A True Story of Murder and Malice in the Woods of the Pacific Northwest by Gregg Olson

June 30, 2024 by faintingviolet Leave a Comment

I added Starvation Heights to my list of books to read back in 2017 but it wasn’t until my current run of true crime reads that it made its way in front of my eyeballs. Part of me, a not insignificant part of me, wishes that I had picked this book up seven years ago and read it then, I think I might have enjoyed it more if I had. Or if I had not read it immediately following The League of Lady Poisoners.   The […]

Filed Under: History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Gregg Olson, historic true crime, medical death, Starvation Heights, true crime

faintingviolet's CBR16 Review No:23 · Genres: History, Non-Fiction · Tags: Gregg Olson, historic true crime, medical death, Starvation Heights, true crime ·
Rating:
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Deliberate or Cruel

Deliberate Cruelty: Truman Capote, the Millionaire's Wife, and the Murder of the Century by Roseanne Montillo

June 14, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

I think Roseanne Montillo is on to something when considering why Truman Capote disdained Anne Woodward so much: their similar backgrounds. Neither was born of upper class New York stock. Neither would have gotten anywhere if not for dint of relationship (Truman’s mom landing a Wall Street guy, Woodward apparently being hot enough to bag a Brahmin). Like the song Creep, they don’t belong here. And both took different, yet stylistically similar paths to get where they were. This is an incredibly readable book that […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: Anne Woodward, Deliberate Cruelty, Roseanne Montillo, true crime, truman capote

Jake's CBR16 Review No:83 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: Anne Woodward, Deliberate Cruelty, Roseanne Montillo, true crime, truman capote ·
Rating:
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“I know something no one else in the world knows.”

The Forever Witness by Edward Humes

June 7, 2024 by narfna Leave a Comment

As a case on its own this wouldn’t have been as interesting, but combined with the focus on DNA technology and how it’s changing, this really worked for me. The murders of Tanya Van Cuylenborg and Jay Cook in 1987 went unsolved until 2018, when the cold case detective, Jim Scharf, decided to use genetic genealogy on the case, and suddenly within weeks they had a suspect and an arrest. But the suddenness of events in 2018 was based on decades of cold case detecting, […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: cold cases, dna, Edward Humes, genetic geneaology, narfna, The Forever Witness, true crime

narfna's CBR16 Review No:30 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: cold cases, dna, Edward Humes, genetic geneaology, narfna, The Forever Witness, true crime ·
Rating:
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Recent Comments

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