Book Report: Solved! Famous Mystery Writers on Classic True-Crime Cases selected by Richard Glyn Jones (1987)
Now,
this is an idea book (unlike
this). This volume collects 11 essays about real criminal cases, written by famous (or semi-famous, or at least
published) authors of suspense or crime fiction. Most of the cases were sensational in the day, but time and probably O.J. have erased them from our minds. As such, they're worth a bit of exploration from decades later and retelling. The book also includes a science fantasy story by Harlan Ellison about Jack the Ripper, which is out of place.
A pretty enjoyable read, although as one Amazon reviewer notes, some things go on too long, including a recap of the Snyder-Gray trial in 1927 and Erle Stanley Gardner's explication of
Argosy magazine's "The Court of Last Resort" series. But still worth the time, I'd say, especially if you can score a copy cheap, such as one cent plus fifteen dollars shipping and handling through the convenient link below.
Books mentioned in this review: