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The New York Times Book of Crime

More Than 166 Years of Covering the Beat

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the archives of The New York Times, 165 years of the most notorious real-life crimes.
For 166 years, The New York Times has been a rich source of information about crime, its reporters racing alongside tabloids to track the shocking incidents that disrupt daily life. This fascinating compilation, edited by seasoned Times crime-beat veteran Kevin Flynn, captures the full sweep of the newspaper’s coverage of the subject—from the assassinations of icons like Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, and Malcolm X to the deadly trails left behind by serial killers like H. H. Holmes (America’s first recognized serial killer), the Son of Sam, and Jeffrey Dahmer. This comprehensive review examines issues like incarceration, organized crime, and vice—from the Attica riot to the powerful Medellin Cartel—as well as the infamous crimes that riveted the world. The kidnappings of Jaycee Dugard and the Lindbergh baby. The Manson murders. The robberies that exasperated law enforcement, from bank heists by Dillinger to the enduring mystery of the greatest art heist in American history at Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. White-collar crimes from Ponzi to Madoff. Crimes of passion, such as Harry Thaw’s dramatic shooting of Stanford White, his rival for the charms of the beautiful Evelyn Nesbit. Chapters are organized by topic and include explanatory material by Flynn to provide context. The book features more than 70 photographs as well as reproductions of front-page stories. Although the focus is on the US, important international stories are included.
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    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 1, 2017
      This presentation of the New York Times' coverage of crime stories, from the assassination of Lincoln to the mass murder in an Orlando gay nightclub in June 2016, joins other compilations of Times stories over time, such as The New York Times Book of Medicine (2015). This latest, however, doesn't provide a steady arc of progress and discovery but, rather, a shocking panoply of man's inhumanity to man. Eleven chapters focus on either individual crimes or persisting issues, such as organized crime and vice. Readers are given the most spectacular breaking-news entries under Assassinations, including the murders of John F. Kennedy and Mohandas Gandhi; Heists; Kidnappings (the kidnapping of the Lindbergh baby, featured on the cover, still shocks); Murder; Mass Murder; Sex Crimes; and White Collar, to identify only seven. The scope is international, though U.S. crimes feature the most heavily. One of the rewards of reading this book is tracking how crime reporting has reflected its own fashions, from nineteenth-century embroidered-with-sentiment accounts through zippy Jazz Age reporting (the lead for the 1929 Valentine's Day Massacre is: Chicago gangland leaders observed Valentine's Day with machine guns and a stream of bullets ) to the more dispassionate tone of modern accounts. The great virtue of all these pieces is the immediacy of breaking news, now read with the hindsight of history. Wonderfully well executed.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from May 1, 2017

      The New York Times is known for high-quality writing and reporting, and for this book, edited by the paper's investigative editor Flynn, it has dipped into its archives for historical articles on the biggest crimes of the last 160 years, from Abraham Lincoln's assassination through the Orlando Pulse nightclub shooting in June 2016. The articles are presented in chronological order within chapters such as "Assassinations," "Serial Killers" and "The Mob." The importance of some incidents, such as the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, weren't understood at the time, whereas others, such as the importance of television in the public's involvement in law and politics, were prescient. While big news such as the O.J. Simpson trial, John F. Kennedy's assassination, and the capture of Whitey Bulger are covered, articles on topics including torture at New York's Sing Sing prison (1855) and the relative safety of marijuana (1926) make an appearance as well. Coverage of a 1927 school massacre is a harsh reminder that there is nothing new under the sun. VERDICT Whether the reader dips in or reads the book straight through, this will be a treat for fans of true crime and the history of journalism.--Deirdre Bray Root, MidPointe Lib. Syst., OH

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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