Starkweather: The Untold Story of the Killing Spree That Changed America

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Product Details
Price
$30.00  $27.90
Publisher
Counterpoint LLC
Publish Date
Pages
432
Dimensions
6.4 X 9.2 X 1.8 inches | 1.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781640095410

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About the Author
HARRY N. MACLEAN is the author of the true crime classic In Broad Daylight: A Murder in Skidmore, Missouri, which won an Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime and was a New York Times bestseller for twelve weeks, selling over 1 million copies. His other books include Once Upon A Time: A True Story of Memory, Murder, and the Law, which was named a New York Times Notable Book and served as the basis for Buried, the Emmy-nominated Showtime series, and The Past Is Never Dead: The Trial of James Ford Seale and Mississippi's Search for Redemption, which was short-listed for the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing. His first novel, The Joy of Killing, was selected as one of the ten best novels of 2015 by the Denver Post. He lives in Denver, Colorado.
Reviews
The Washington Post, A Best Nonfiction Book of the Year
Amazon, A Best History Book of the Month

"[MacLean's] narrative delivers the chilling goods." --Edward Kosner, The Wall Street Journal

"Starkweather is a story about a different time in a different America . . . [A] grim story, and that grimness is the paradoxical joy of reading MacLean--the raw chill creeping through your veins that feels authentic to the place and the crimes, the lean and vivid sentences rivaling Capote's In Cold Blood and Mailer's The Executioner's Song." --Carl Hoffman, The Washington Post

"Absorbing . . . A history of the murderer whose nihilism inspired generations of responses." --Christopher Borrelli, Chicago Tribune

"Without question, the best, most thorough and convincingly analyzed book about Starkweather and Fugate, and to some measure Lincoln, in the late 1950s, and is the definitive account of the first mass murder of the television age." --L. Kent Wolgamott, The Lincoln Journal Star

"A blockbuster of a book, [and] hard to put down . . . The stunning ending alone is reason enough to read it." --Sandra Dallas, The Denver Post

"A revelatory work of investigation." --Patrick Sauer, Southern California News Group

"A gripping tale, artfully told by a seasoned crime writer, whose deep dive into the historical records sheds new light on an old but still disturbing crime, and on the 1950s criminal justice system that was ill-equipped to handle this new genre of crime: the murder spree." --Maureen Stanton, New York Journal of Books

"Deeply empathetic . . . MacLean rights the record and gets deep into the psychology of not only his subjects, but their claustrophobic and constrained time and place." --Molly Odintz, CrimeReads

"Definitive, gripping, and sure to stir up debate on a dark moment in U.S. history." --Shelf Awareness

"A magisterial study of the infamous murders committed by 19-year-old Charles Starkweather across Nebraska and Wyoming in the 1950s . . . Propulsive . . . An instant true crime classic." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"An absorbing reconstruction of the tragic events that transpired in Lincoln, providing logic and reasoning along with testimony in debating Fugate's culpability. With the potential to change minds about long-ago crimes, this is all but destined to become a genre classic." --Booklist

"Covering a true crime that inspired the film Natural Born Killers, MacLean's book sheds new light on the case . . . [Starkweather] is expertly written. Crime aficionados will enjoy." --Library Journal

"Starkweather is a profound and beautiful reexamination and reinvestigation of a story that is instantly familiar. Not simply essential reading for true crime fans, but for anyone who wants to understand the root of our fascination with the genre. Mythbusting and surprising, MacLean's latest transcends the genre that it also elevates." --Ivy Pochoda, author of Sing Her Down

"Starkweather is a comprehensive, poetic, and brutal examination of American violence and our collective propensity for self-deception that upends everything you think you know about these so-called natural born killers. MacLean has penned an instant classic." --Tod Goldberg, author of Gangsters Don't Die

"Spellbinding. Starkweather is not only a chronicle of Charlie's brief life and crimes, but also a skillful examination of the dark moment when a shocking murder spree in an unexpected place collided with a nascent national media--and changed America forever. Anyone today who seriously wonders how our crimescape became so freakish must read this book. It's one of our most meticulously researched and important crime-history books in a long time." --Ron Franscell, author of Deaf Row

"MacLean offers the most comprehensive work to date on the horrific murder spree launched in Nebraska by nineteen-year-old Charles Starkweather. As a community insider, MacLean presents a convincing case that the myth of teenage lovers on a murderous lark must be remedied. True-crime fans will be enthralled." --Dr. Katherine Ramsland, professor of forensic psychology and award-winning author of Confession of a Serial Killer

"Spellbinding. Starkweather is not only a chronicle of Charlie's brief life and crimes, but also a skillful examination of the dark moment when a shocking murder spree in an unexpected place collided with a nascent national media--and changed America forever. Anyone today who seriously wonders how our crimescape became so freakish must read this book. It's one of our most meticulously researched and important crime-history books in a long time." --Ron Franscell, New York Times bestselling author of ShadowMan: An Elusive Psycho Killer and the Birth of FBI Profiling

"Harry N. MacLean's Starkweather examines the famous killing spree committed by a teenage couple, nineteen-year-old Charles Starkweather and fourteen-year-old Caril Fugate--a spree that shocked millions and changed forever how America thought of violence. Murder is a complex event. Its consequences ripple forever through the lives of those left to live with what was lost. What was lost in the Starkweather killings has never been so fully revealed as it is here, in MacLean's uncommon close reading of this legendary tragedy. Caril, who walked out of high school one afternoon and entered history in a way that nobody could have seen coming, is, in a way, the secret story in Starkweather. We thought we knew the story, but the author may have uncovered what had been hidden in plain sight since 1958." --Mikal Gilmore, author of Shot in the Heart