Friday, February 23, 2024

Murderabilia: A History of Crime in 100 Objects by Harold Schechter

 


Reviewed by Jeanne

True crime exerts a strong fascination. Long before movies, television shows, podcasts, and internet sites catered to public interest, there were books, newspaper articles, pamphlets, and yes, even songs to immortalize murders, kidnappings, and other crimes.  In this book, author Schechter has an illustration of an item connected with the crime and puts it in context with a brief explanation.

The book is arranged chronologically, starting with the murder of Naomi Wise in 1808. The photo is of her tombstone, but the “object” is actually a murder ballad.  Her story became “Little Omie,” a song that has been recorded numerous times, including versions by Doc Watson, Bob Dylan, and Elvis Costello.  It follows a pattern that goes back centuries and has crossed continents, that of a young woman murdered by the man she loves.

The final entry in the book is from 2014, and shows a soil sample from the “Slender Man” site, where two school girls stabbed a friend.  The two had concocted the plan in order to prove themselves worthy to a fictitious internet creature. 

In between are items as varied as Al Capone’s rap sheet, the death mask of Burke (as in the infamous Burke and Hare), a message from the Black Dahlia killer, John Wayne Gacy’s business card, and the remains of a pressure cooker from the Boston Marathon bombing.  Most of the stories are from the U.S., though there are a few international ones as well.  The summaries run about two pages.   

Schechter has written several other true crime books, including Hell’s Princess (about the infamous Belle Gunness) and Ripped from the Headlines: The Shocking True Stories Behind the Movies’ Most Memorable Crimes so this is territory he knows well. 

 I will confess—no pun intended—that I didn’t read the entire book.  There’s a limit to the amount of real life murder I want to read in a sitting.  I did look up some cases, such as the Lindbergh kidnapping, just to see how Schechter described it. In a nutshell, he covered the evidence but acknowledged that in the years since there have been questions as to Hauptmann’s guilt.  He didn’t go into detail.

 If you are a true crime aficionado, this may be a good browsing book for you. 

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