Book Review: The Family Of Madness

Helter Skelter is probably the definitive volume that sheds light on the crimes masterminded by Charles Manson in 1969 which resulted in the brutal slayings of several people, including actress Sharon Tate. Vincent Bugliosi, the lead prosecutor of Manson in the subsequent trial of him and several of his so-called Family, wrote the book alongside Curt Gentry.

Bugliosi’s account of his investigation and gathering of the evidence needed to secure the convictions is pretty compelling. He and his co-author do a decent job of laying out the facts of the case and Bugliosi’s impressions of Manson and the insanity of his Family’s motivations to commit their heinous murders.

The book is a tough read, but there was a lot of facts and issues that needed to be presented. The account is quite thorough, but it does drag a little at times. That is probably not really the authors’ fault though since there was so much going on with putting the case together.

The book is also a pretty good lesson on what some prosecutors have to go through to put a case together. It was instructive to have Bugliosi’s perspective as he relates how he gathered and organized the evidence.

It was a bit of a chore to get through, but it was worth the effort. The murders planned by Charles Manson was a huge media sensation starting in 1969, and it is quite interesting to get an inside account of the personalities involved and the trial preparation.

I don’t know if saying I enjoyed this piece is all that appropriate, but I am glad to have read it. Bugliosi and Gentry do a pretty good job of laying out the details of a what turned out to be a terribly complicated case.

Next up, I am going to dig into Andrew Klavan’s A Woman Underground.

Book Review: The Taming Of Dodge City

Dodge City: Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, and the Wickedest Town in the American West by Tom Clavin is a fascinating account of how one of the wildest settlements in the expanding nation was tamed largely by two legendary figures what is known as the Wild West.

Clavin is a prolific historical writer who specializes one of the most fabled eras of American history. He presents the reader with an interesting problem at the beginning. He reports that there is almost too much material to sift through regarding Wyatt Earp, but there is relatively scant information about Bat Masterson. He still manages to present fascinating histories of both of these men we well as other familiar names such as Doc Holliday, Jesse James, and Billy the Kid.

Clavin’s prose is pretty straight-forward, but he does pepper the book with some sly humor. He does acknowledge that there is a lot of falsehoods to weed through in his research. He is pretty clear as to when he is speculating as to how certain events went down, which is appreciated.

He said that much of the exploits of Earp and Masterson have been embellished by other writers and the media over the decades, but it seems their actual lives were much more enthralling than many led regardless.

There isn’t much to really criticize about this book. Not everything was laid out linearly, but I suspect that many books of this sort are like that. There is a bit of jumping back and forth in the timeline as Clavin has to divide his attention between two main figures of 1870’s

Clavin is very thorough in his research and seems to be forthright about some of the ambiguity in the information he had gathered. As mentioned before, he does a great job of identifying moments of speculation and some guessing as to what motivated certain people in certain events.

This is a rare reading indulgence for me. I don’t read much non-fiction; however, I hope to improve on that this coming year. I will likely revisit the works of Tom Clavin before long.

Anyway, for those interested in a more reliable account of the Old West, Clavin seems to be an excellent place to start. Dodge City is a very enlightening and entertaining read and provides what seems a probable accurate take on what life was like in one of the most turbulent periods in American lore.

I will return to thriller genre with a writer I have noticed recently who seems to have quite a bibliography for someone who seems so new to the literary scene. I am about to be introduced by Freida McFadden to The Perfect Son.

Book Review: When The Dam Breaks, The Dead Will Rise

The Chill is a supernatural thriller published in 2020 by Scott Carson and is one of the better reads for me in 2024. A village known as Galesburg, New York was drowned many decades ago, yet the souls of that lost town live on within the Chilewaukee Reservoir, and the town of Torrance is about the face them.

There is a dam that is about to break due to the onslaught of a relentless rainstorm, and it may release the spirits of the drowned Galesburg. A ghost is already influencing the engineer evaluating the integrity of the dam. A young man, who was recently discharged from the US Coast Guard Academy believes he had killed someone accidentally, however the apparent victim turned up alive. The spirits are still working under the reservoir to complete a work that was to be done while they still lived. The living and the dead meet when the dam breaks as prophesied.

I wish I had the gift of eloquence such as this author, Scott Carson, but I really enjoyed this novel. I dip into the horror genre occasionally, but I am often frustrated with resolutions in many tales in this form. This one really works. The characters are people I could like and stay interested in following. There are plenty of truly suspenseful scenes throughout. The twists were not that predictable. Carson is noted to be the pseudonym of an already well-known author. That does make sense in that this does appear to be written by someone with experience.

The Chill refers to the waters in the reservoir, but there were some chilling scenes that were quite effective. This particular novel is certainly a candidate for one of the better ones I am to read for 2024.

Next up, I was given the key to The House of Love and Death by author Andrew Klavan, so I will see what secrets await me.