9781598530315-1598530313-True Crime: An American Anthology: A Library of America Special Publication

True Crime: An American Anthology: A Library of America Special Publication

ISBN-13: 9781598530315
ISBN-10: 1598530313
Edition: First Edition
Author: Harold Schechter
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: Library of America
Format: Hardcover 900 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781598530315
ISBN-10: 1598530313
Edition: First Edition
Author: Harold Schechter
Publication date: 2008
Publisher: Library of America
Format: Hardcover 900 pages

Summary

True Crime: An American Anthology: A Library of America Special Publication (ISBN-13: 9781598530315 and ISBN-10: 1598530313), written by authors Harold Schechter, was published by Library of America in 2008. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other Murder & Mayhem (True Crime, Law Enforcement, Criminal Law, Violence in Society, Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent True Crime: An American Anthology: A Library of America Special Publication (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Murder & Mayhem books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $2.41.

Description

Americans have had an uneasy fascination with crime since the earliest European settlements in the New World, and right from the start true crime writing became a dominant genre in American writing. True Crime: An American Anthology offers the first comprehensive look at the many ways in which American writers have explored crime in a multitude of aspects: the dark motives that spur it, the shock of its impact on society, the effort to make sense of the violent extremes of human behavior. Here is the full spectrum of the true crime genre, including accounts of some of the most notorious criminal cases in American history: the Helen Jewett murder and the once-notorious ?Kentucky tragedy? of the 1830s, the assassination of President Garfield, the Snyder- Gray murder that inspired Double Indemnity, the Lindbergh kidnapping, the Black Dahlia, Leopold and Loeb, and the Manson family. True Crime draws upon the writing of literary figures as diverse as Nathaniel Hawthorne (reporting on a visit to a waxworks exhibit of notorious crimes), Ambrose Bierce, Mark Twain, Theodore Dreiser (offering his views on a 1934 murder that some saw as a ?copycat? version of An American Tragedy), James Thurber, Joseph Mitchell, and Truman Capote and sources as varied as execution sermons, murder ballads, early broadsides and trial reports, and tabloid journalism of many different eras. It also features the influential true crime writing of best-selling contemporary practitioners like James Ellroy, Gay Talese, Dominick Dunne, and Ann Rule.

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