Member Reviews

One of the best true crime books around. Well written. Would highly recommend.

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Fatal Deceptions is a set of three of Joe Sharkey's best true crime books. All of them are very good books, which I really liked. Under Suspicion (which is once again being made into a movie) is about the murder of Susan Smith Daniels, who has an affair with a married FBI agent and becomes pregnant - then murdered. The first time in history that a current FBI agent has committed murder. Deadly Greed is about Carol Stuart of Boston who is also pregnant and is murdered. Her husband, Charles, blamed it on a black man, when in reality he was the one who shot and killed her. He apparently did not really want to be a father and wanted the insurance money. Death Sentence is about family annihilator John List, who killed each member of his family, including his elderly mother, He had a deluded sense of what he should do as a provider and was not living up to that high standard, since he could not find a job and was in debt up to his eyeballs. He also felt that killing his family was the most righteous thing for them, so that they would all go to heaven. He then disappeared. All three of these books are very well written and researched. They are 3 of the best true crime books available.
For all true crime fans, I highly recommend these books. Even if you know all about how it turns out, the road to that conclusion is fascinating.

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Khalessi as a murder victim? Daenerys Targarian a wife whose husband cheats on her? OK, now that I have your attention, Joe Sharkey’s book Fatal Deceptions is a collection of three previously published true crime books, one of which has been made into a movie starring Emilia Clarke of Game of Thrones fame, set for 2017 release. And, thanks to Open Road Integrated Media and NetGalley, I received a copy in exchange for my honest review.

The first story, Above Suspicion, is the one that is “soon to be a major motion picture.” A well-written story, this is the true account of Mark Putnam, the only FBI agent ever to confess to murder. In his first posting, he was assigned to Pikeville, Kentucky, he was a real go-getter as he cultivated paid informants, broke up drug rings, and captured bank robbers. He was a rising star in the Bureau, but he became too close to one informant (played by Emilia Clarke). When she fell in love with the Bureau’s rising star, things spiraled so far out of control you could just FEEL the inevitable train wreck coming.

The second story was made into a movie (“Goodnight, Sweet Wife”) in the 1990s. Deadly Greed tells the story of Charles Stuart who called to report to the police that he and his wife, Carol, were in a car and had been robbed and shot by a black male on the streets of Boston. By the time police arrived, Carol was dead, and the baby, delivered at 7 months, died soon after. There was a media frenzy as politicians and police administrators jumped on the story. Charles, a really disgusting creep, then identified a suspect and the media frenzy continued. But the only killer was Charles himself. This story resonated with me for the parallels with stories about the police today who first identify a suspect and then gather their evidence to support that story. Ugh.

In the final story, Death Sentence the vice president of a Jersey City bank moved his mother, wife, and three teenage children into a nineteen-room mansion in Westfield, New Jersey. Then he lost his job and everything changed. So fearful of what this and the changing social mores as the 1960s became the 1970s would do to his children, his solution was to shoot the entire family then disappear, taking on a new identity.

Summing up, three well-written books in the true crime genre all in one package. By the time you finish these, your concerns about police may be deepened, and you will likely think something along the lines of “What the ^&*% was he thinking?”

Four stars.

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