Bizarre! Shocking! Horrific! Depraved!18 Shocking True Crime Murder Cases From Around The World, including;
The Bodies In The Trunk: A steamer trunk sits on the platform, leaking a vile smelling brown liquid. Who will collect it and, more importantly, what’s inside?
Blood Will Tell: A serial killer is stalking a quiet English village. Can newly discovered DNA technology catch him before he kills again?
The Ugly Death Of A Beauty Queen: Five ne’er-do-goods outlooking for trouble; a beautiful, young woman walking home in the dark. A tragedy waiting to happen.
An Eye For An Eye: The victim was a burly biker, the killer, a tiny woman wielding a pickaxe. He never stood a chance.
The Colorado Cannibal: Six prospectors go into the Colorado wilderness looking for gold. Five find violent death, the other, a taste for spare rib.
The Sadistic Mr. Heath: He preferred his sex with a dollop of pain, inflicted by him, on others.
The Philadelphia Poison Ring: A routine murder enquiry unlocks one of the most heinous murder–for–profit schemes in US history.
Unhinged: Poisoned cookies, guns and firebombs. The day Laurie Dann finally cracked.
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Plus 10 more riveting true crime cases. Scroll up to get your copy now.
Book Series by Robert Keller
Most of my works cover serial killers, while the “Murder Most Vile” series covers individual true crime stories. These are the main collections;
American Monsters50 American Serial Killers You’ve Probably Never Heard OfMurder Most VileHuman MonstersBritish MonstersAustralian MonstersCanadian MonstersGerman MonstersCannibal KillersPlus various other standalone books, including the The Deadly Dozen, which is available as a free download on Amazon, and Serial Killers Unsolved, which you can get for free when signing up to my mailing list.Robert Keller’s True Crime eBook
Serial KillersTrue CrimeSerial Killer BiographiesMurder and MayhemTrue Murder CasesSerial Killer Case FilesTrue Crime Short Stories
Some old, some new, some familiar, some I had never heard about. This book covers 18 cases of murder most vile.
There are some errors that could have been corrected before publishing with competent proofreading. However, I would recommend this book and the other volumes to anyone who enjoys reading about true crime.
Some true crime anthologies reek of terrible editing and blase stories. Keller's do not! He writes about some of the best known and intriguing cases. Even though I have read many of the stories in full length form his books are still worth perusal. I love that "An American Tragedy" was included in this volume. So enjoyable.
Just When You Think You Know the Whole Story I realize that because I read a great deal of True Crime & watch many documentary programs on the subject I will come across some of the same cases repeatedly. What I like about Mr. Keller is that he is able to sprinkle just enough new material so that I never get bored or feel like I'm wasting my time when I read his various series but in particular Murder Most Vile.
It's always enlightening when I can say, "Wow! I've never heard of that crime before." Some killers think they are so clever but the slow machinations of justice most often prevail. As I've stated before - I don't like to read about Unsolved Murders. Life can be scary enough without the thought of murderers just waiting for their opportunity to pounce on you. Mr. Keller delivers in Volume 2 of this series.
Excellent stories including some notorious killers. Robert Keller improves with each book you read. In this volume he adds much more detail of the solving of the crimes than in previous Keller books. The stories here include the mass murder by Richard Speck, the case of Lester Gillette (Theodore Dreiser utilized this case to write his magnificent An American Tragedy), Neville Heath, Lizzie Borden (did you know she was 33 when she murdered her parents?) and the story of Pauline Parker and Juliette Hulme. These two killed Parker's mother while still young teenagers and didn't stay in prison all that long. After serving her time, Hulme changed her name and became the famous writer Ann Perry. Each essay here is about five to ten pages long and is heavy in details of the case. Keller writes excellent first paragraphs and sucks you right in to the stories. Excellent.