Richard W. Carson

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Richard W. Carson

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Born
in Detroit, The United States
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March 2014

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Richard W. Carson grew up in Detroit, and graduated from Cooley High School. He attended Ferris State College at Big Rapids and appeared unspectacularly as Christian de Neuvillette in a campus production of Cyrano DeBergerac.
Carson later transferred to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and, having wisely abandoned his interest in the stage, majored in English.
In 1967, Carson joined the staff of the Huron Daily Tribune, a small daily in Michigan’s Upper Thumb area. There he worked as a general-assignment reporter, was promoted to editor, and received awards for excellence in editorial and feature writing as well as news, sports and feature photography.
Small-town life, which always appealed to the city boy, gave way to career oppor
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Richard W. Carson Appreciate your interest and welcome any advice you might have as to how I can get this eBook off the ground.
Average rating: 3.48 · 56 ratings · 9 reviews · 2 distinct works
Murder in the Thumb

3.49 avg rating — 43 ratings — published 2009 — 4 editions
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Fruit of the Poisonous Tree

3.46 avg rating — 13 ratings — published 2012 — 2 editions
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“Fruit of the Poisonous Tree, The True Story of Murder in a Small Town, begins on a steamy August night with two teenagers, brother and sister, on an evil mission deep in a rural Michigan forest. For one desperate moment headlights appear on the lonely access road. Will they be found out? Thus the story of one of state’s strangest criminal cases unfolds. Girl breaks up with boyfriend. He turns violent. She disappears without a trace. Then state police investigators set out on what at first looks like a fool’s journey. The story is colored by a bizarre Ouija board death prophesy and the roles of two psychics, a former practicing witch and a handsome young artist who is suspected of Satanism. The canny and elusive suspect taunts police and seems always to be one step ahead of them. When a key witness is daunted by uncharacteristic injuries, a mysterious medium tells him he is the victim of black magic practiced by the suspect’s grandmother. And when, after eight years, the suspect finally is brought to trial, he is represented by a Roman Catholic priest.”
Richard W Carson

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