Helter Skelter
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Was it really scary?
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Linda
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rated it 4 stars
Jan 06, 2014 02:26AM

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I'm a bit late on this, but I agree - it is the best true crime book ever written and I found it horribly gripping from start to finish.


I also have re read it a number of times. It certainly is an education about the American justice system and also makes one utterly astounded at the number of mistakes made in the investigation and grateful for the combination of hard work and providence which brought it to its conclusion.

I really liked the book "Restless Souls" that came out a year or so ago. It was filled with diaries kept by Sharon Tate's family after her murder including some interesting info written by her father, Col. Paul Tate.




The scary part is that it actually happened.



Bugliosi lays it out well in Helter Skelter. I see how Charlie could find these people in that time, place, and culture. I see how they could be manipulated. I will never understand how a man with what is obviously a high degree of social intelligence could come up with and believe the whole Helter Skelter theory.
Psychopathology. Huh.

I presume you're talking about Manson and not Bugliosi...

Other books similar to this that I would recommend is Wiseguy by Nicholas Pileggi (they made the film "Goodfellas" out of this); Columbine, about the 1999 mass killing in Colorado; and Newtown by Matthew Lysiak about the more recent mass murders in Connecticut.

Laughing here. Yes, referring to Manson, but now I'm wondering if there's something I should know about Bugliosi. Hmmmmm.

Could be - because it could be argued that it WAS Bugliosi who 'came up with the whole Helter Skelter theory'...(!)

Tammy, the only way to find out if it is scary for you is to read it!

As I stated in my review, this would have scared me had I read it when it was first written,* but I know so much about the murders and murderers now, that it lost that. However, it's still scary that there are people capable of doing these crimes and saying how good it feels to stab someone! I'm just glad they are all still in prison--Beausoleil and Tex too! (I just looked them up.)
*I read IN COLD BLOOD around the time the movie was made (and I was very young) and it scared me to death, so much that I still think about it.




Wow. Rough neighborhood.

Of course. Sorry - didn't mean to sound so flippant.


I had the same experience with the In Cold Blood murders, being by myself at home and looking at the killers' faces in Life magazine. Chilling.
Something about the most horrendous cases fascinates us yet horrifies us too. One of the scariest to me was Richard Speck. I feel so much safer when these killers die.


I read it in 1996, its factual not scary. Its a fantastic book
Enjoy reading it :)



It depends on the perspective. The book is massive but not in a single page I find it dry and bore. Definitely one of the best books concerning True Crime. The book describes Bugliosi's attemp to prove and convict, using real facts and as the lead prosecution attorney, one of the most fascinating deranged minds in the annals of the XX century. Excellent book!

the first edition came out in the mid 70s, Starsky and Hutch was deemed a cop drama on TV ... the images and videos of violent death were not available like they are today and reading books like Helter Skelter left each reader imagining the horror. The whiting-out of the bodies even led readers to believe the carnage was too graphic to show. Fast forward 40 years ... 24/7 access to pics and videos revealing the most graphic imagery of death and mutilation has DESENSITIZED the population to the Manson murders. Even R rated horror movies from the 70s and 80s is more likely to trigger eye-rolls and laughs nowadays. But, for those of us who read it way back then, it was scary/disturbing. Kind of like trying to convince a video gamer today how much fun Pong was when it first came out ... you had to experience it back then to understand and appreciate it.

A well written book...


that a greedy and unscrupulous district attorney achieved his shady goals.