I read one of these a month, because I have to work on them as part of my job. I would probably never pick one up outside of work, but I do think some of them are very interesting and well-written.
Mostly the previous paragraph is by way of establishing bona fides. What's crystal clear to me is that the quality of a true crime book depends heavily on the writer. Some are very well written--journalists tend to do a good job of making something fascinating without getting sensationalistic. (Well...some reporters are more in the National Enquirer mold and go for the overblown "Isn't this awful? But you can't look away!" approach.)
A good TC book will be a fascinating look at truly fucked-up psychology. It may also be an engaging mystery; some of the best TC books are like narratives from the POV of the investigators and prosecutors, much like watching Law and OrderThe best TC books also cover interesting cases. Not necessarily serial-murder or multi-murder cases; some of the person-murders-
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I admit to being fascinated, although I don't read a steady diet of these.
What's crystal clear to me is that the quality of a true crime book depends heavily on the writer.
Absolutely. Some can be pretty trashy, but but some achieve something much more important and universal.
The best I ever read was My Dark Places by James Ellroy, but that was more than just a true crime story (his mother's murder). It was a deeply noir and twisted coming of age story, a journey towards healing, as well as an investigation of a crime. And what I liked most of all was that Ellroy made absolutely no excuses for his own cruddy behavior--didn't try to blame it on his cruddy childhood, took full responsibility.
I'm currently reading Black Dahlia Avenger by Steve Hodel, a retired LAPD Homicide detective who accuses his own father, a prominent physician in 40s LA, of the deed and links him to a string of murders of women. Strange, Freudian in a way, but he does present a fairly convincing case to me (and James Ellroy, as it happens).
I read one of these a month, because I have to work on them as part of my job.
Interesting. What do you do for a living?
I enjoy a good true crime book now and again. I think it's interesting reading. I really enjoyed a book called "The Evil that Men Do" by Roy Hazelwood. That was an interesting look at serial killers from the mind of a profiler.
I'm a design manager, which means I see to the design and typesetting of the interiors of books. We do one TC book a month. Basically, it crosses my desk and I have to go through it at least a little, and if it's any good, I'll pretty much read it.
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I read one of these a month, because I have to work on them as part of my job. I would probably never pick one up outside of work, but I do think some of them are very interesting and well-written.
Mostly the previous paragraph is by way of establishing bona fides. What's crystal clear to me is that the quality of a true crime book depends heavily on the writer. Some are very well written--journalists tend to do a good job of making something fascinating without getting sensationalistic. (Well...some reporters are more in the National Enquirer mold and go for the overblown "Isn't this awful? But you can't look away!" approach.)
A good TC book will be a fascinating look at truly fucked-up psychology. It may also be an engaging mystery; some of the best TC books are like narratives from the POV of the investigators and prosecutors, much like watching Law and OrderThe best TC books also cover interesting cases. Not necessarily serial-murder or multi-murder cases; some of the person-murders- ( ... )
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What's crystal clear to me is that the quality of a true crime book depends heavily on the writer.
Absolutely. Some can be pretty trashy, but but some achieve something much more important and universal.
The best I ever read was My Dark Places by James Ellroy, but that was more than just a true crime story (his mother's murder). It was a deeply noir and twisted coming of age story, a journey towards healing, as well as an investigation of a crime. And what I liked most of all was that Ellroy made absolutely no excuses for his own cruddy behavior--didn't try to blame it on his cruddy childhood, took full responsibility.
I'm currently reading Black Dahlia Avenger by Steve Hodel, a retired LAPD Homicide detective who accuses his own father, a prominent physician in 40s LA, of the deed and links him to a string of murders of women. Strange, Freudian in a way, but he does present a fairly convincing case to me (and James Ellroy, as it happens).
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Interesting. What do you do for a living?
I enjoy a good true crime book now and again. I think it's interesting reading. I really enjoyed a book called "The Evil that Men Do" by Roy Hazelwood. That was an interesting look at serial killers from the mind of a profiler.
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