Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Deadly Pursuit

Rate this book
Narrates the central Pennsylvanian manhunt that ended the two-year crime career of the Mountain Man, an insane armed rapist and kidnapper who terrorized the inhabitants of the little town of Shade Gap

200 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 1977

2 people are currently reading
77 people want to read

About the author

Robert V. Cox

3 books5 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
14 (28%)
4 stars
17 (34%)
3 stars
13 (26%)
2 stars
5 (10%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Katherine Addison.
Author 18 books3,727 followers
January 4, 2016
Robert Cox won the Pulitzer for his vivid deadline reporting of the kidnapping of Peggy Ann Bradnick and the massive manhunt that followed, but--I'm sorry, and I'm not saying this to be glib--you wouldn't know it from Deadly Pursuit. The writing is pedestrian at best (not vivid); the efforts to build suspense clumsy, obvious, and annoying; Cox writes from the point of view of the victim(s) of each of Hollenbaugh's attacks before the kidnapping, the murdered F.B.I. agent, the murdered F.B.I. agent's wife (for pathos), "Mary Lou Broderick" (Bradnick--one of her younger sisters was actually named Mary Louise, which makes this seem like a pretty damn tactless choice on Cox's part), a news photographer, police officers, sheriff's deputies, and--oh yeah--Robert V. Cox himself. There's something unspeakably creepy to me about the way he writes about himself in the third person--not just that he does it, although he'd really be better off to 'fess up and use first, since his identity is not secret--but the weird flat way Cox's PoV seems not a shred more real than that of Terry Anderson, which Cox is blatantly making up, given that Anderson was killed before the manhunt was even over. (I found myself surprised that he didn't drop into the PoV of one of the dogs--several dogs play critical roles in the story--because that's just the sort of cheap emotionally manipulative stunt that seems right up Cox's alley.) He does not organize his facts well, and the way he wanders from PoV to PoV makes it really quite difficult to keep track of what the hell is going on.

Also, while I'm complaining, hoo boy is it 1966 in this book. All the police officers and F.B.I. agents and volunteer manhunters are men (manly men, men in tights); all the women are victims or providers of food (no, really, that's the most contribution any woman in the book makes toward this massive effort--they contribute less than the German Shepherds. Which are male.). Women can also cry, while men are manly and uncomfortable: "While Margie and Brenda sobbed, both agents remained silent" (156). The male/female active/passive divide is absolute. And this is so completely Cox's understanding of the way the world works that it took me two-thirds of the book to notice it. I don't know if there were really no women actively involved in the manhunt or if Cox just didn't see them.

Six of the book's 200 pages are spent on Peggy Ann Bradnick's side of the story.

He also keeps raising the question of whether Hollenbaugh was really the Mountain Man, the guy who'd been terrorizing that part of Pennsylvania for two years, but every shred of evidence he gives us indicates the answer is yes. I can see why there might be reason to doubt--the Mountain Man raped one of his victims, but Hollenbaugh did not sexually assault Peggy Ann Bradnick, despite holding her captive for eight days, the (vague, confused) eyewitness descriptions of the Mountain Man don't match up with Hollenbaugh--but Hollenbaugh, from Bradnick's testimony, was using devices to alter his appearance, and otherwise, Cox doesn't explain. Is there a plausible theory that Shade Gap and environs were being plagued by two such predators? If there is, I need more details; if there isn't, stop trying to manufacture mystery out of nothing.

According to Cox, Terry Anderson was the sixth FBI agent killed in the line of duty. The blog of New York radio station WFMU says ninth. On the FBI's list, he's number fifteen. I think I know who to believe here.

So far as I (or Wikipedia) know, this is the only book about Hollenbaugh's crimes.
Profile Image for Scott.
2,286 reviews273 followers
June 1, 2019
Chilling, straightforward 'true crime' story - before such books became excessively common on the market - about the abduction of a teenage girl in the spring of 1966 and the ensuing large-scale manhunt for her criminally insane kidnapper in rural central Pennsylvania.

I had first heard of the incident when NBC produced a decent TV-movie adaptation in 1991 starring David Morse and David Soul. If you can't get a copy of the book check for the flick on YouTube or cable stations.

There is a particularly sad death during the pursuit, serving as a reminder of the inherent danger and sacrifices in the law enforcement profession.

Profile Image for Jenny.
39 reviews
August 8, 2009
I read this story because it was true. I read this story because it happen where I once lived. I read this story because my family knew the people terrorized in this book. My dad was appointed to serve as pastor only a short time after the capture of "the mountain man." It was chilling at some points.
Profile Image for Patricia Walters.
141 reviews3 followers
June 25, 2021
My fathers career with the Pennsylvania State police included searching for "Bicycle Pete" during the Peggy Broderick kidnapping. He had this book kn his collection...a majority of the book focuses on the police efforts to find Peggy and behind the scenes community support in the search. This was an easy read and gave me new insight to the risks taken by law enforcement every day...
Profile Image for Bookdragon_Lady.
216 reviews17 followers
January 3, 2024
What a story. All those officers and military personnel, and one lone backwoods crazy man couldn't be found and stopped. Years of terror. The poor girl he kidnapped. I live in PA, although I wasn't yet born when this happened. I do wish, however, that the author would have included some pictures.
48 reviews
July 9, 2024
My interst in the book came from experiencing the event as a teenager. My Father, Brother, and I participated in the manhunt. The Mountain Man lived on the other side of the Tuscarora Mountain from us. So everyone in our area was familiar with what was going on. In a sense, it was a parallel to the 2002 sniper attacks in the Washington DC metro area.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.