Stacy Horn's Blog
November 22, 2025
Celebrating Science
Pictures from the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Double Helix Medals Dinner at the American Museum of Natural History (in the squid and the whale room!). Picture 1: The room. Picture 2: scientists from the lab who were asked to stand. Picture 3: Martina Navratilova, who, along with Chrissie Evert, were honored for their contributions to science. Dr. Bob Langer was honored for his contributions in biotechnology. He was such a mensch. Google him, he’s amazing.
I loved how Martina and Chrissie, who were such fierce competitors, came to be true friends. At the dinner, Martina mentioned how nice it was for her and Chrissie to be happy on the same day. When they were competing, one of them would always be happy because they won, and the other would be sad because they lost.
My brother, Douglas Horn, is on the board of the Laboratory, that’s how I got to go! Who doesn’t love celebrating science? Thank you, Douglas!
October 14, 2025
Sign up for my 11/6 Book Talk!
On November 6, at 6:00, I’ll be talking about my new book, The Killing Fields of East New York: The First Subprime Mortgage Scandal, a White-Collar Crime Spree, and the Collapse of an American Neighborhood in East New York!
Joining me for the discussion will be: Hailie Kim, Director of Community Organizing, Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation, Sarita Daftary-Steel, Co-Director, Freedom Agenda at Urban Justice Center, and Yasmin Schwartz, Division Director
United Community Centers.
The talk is sponsored by the Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation, The East NY Coalition for Community Advancement, and the United Community Centers.
Place: United Community Centers
613 New Lots Avenue
East New York
Sign up here!
September 16, 2025
Podcasts and Damnation Island
Concidentally, I am on two podcasts this week talking about my book Damnation Island. Philip Yanos, Ph.D., the author of excellent and important book, Exiles in New York City: Warehousing the Marginalized on Ward’s Island, has started a podcast which focuses on stories of banishment. I am the guest in the current episode! From my blurb for Yanos’s great book: “A riveting look at the untold history of the treatment and mistreatment of marginalized groups banished to Ward’s Island. Combining compassionate understanding with clear and informed insight, this account is impossible to put down. The final chapter, with an alternative vision for the island’s future, is positively thrilling.”
I am also on Travis Myers’ podcast, Another Nobody! Myers is a crime author, including the three book series which begins with Sister Margaret, A Tommy Keane Novel. “Sister Margaret is a gut punch of a tale that takes the reader behind the crime-scene tape and onto an exhilarating tour of the streets, drug dens, dive bars, and precinict houses of New York City, with an insiders view that rarely makes the papers.” -Jesse Smith, Crime Journalist, Kingston Times
July 6, 2025
Bryant Park True Crime Panel
As part of the Bryant Park Author Series, I will be on a True Crime Panel on August 13 at 12:30pm. Bryant Park (40th & 42nd) is in back of the New York Public Library. We’ll be on the 42nd Street side of the park, in between the back of the NYPL and 6th Ave. Look for the yellow and white umbrellas.
The panel will be hosted by the fabulous Peter Moskos, who is a former Baltimore police officer, now a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and the author of Back from the Brink: Inside the NYPD and New York City’s Extraordinary 1990’s Crime Drop. On the panel will be myself (The Killing Fields of East New York) and author Casey Sherman, Blood in the Water: The Untold Story of a Family Tragedy.
This is a picture of me on another panel, for Claire L. Evan’s book Broad Band: The Untold History of the Women Who Made the Internet. That’s Claire on the left, me, and Jaime Levy, a new media artist and interface designer.
June 17, 2025
I’m on a Podcast! See me animated!
I’m on Another Nobody podcast hosted by crime author & NYC history buff Travis Myers, talking about The Killing Fields of East New York. His questions came from the perspective of someone born and raised in NYC and who worked for years for the NYPD.
I was also recently interviewed by Matthew Cox for The Saucetown Investor Podcast! Always a bit scary talking to people who are experts about something you wrote about, but this was a pleasure!
June 13, 2025
Twenty Years!
I started this blog twenty years ago! I didn’t post a lot at first. It was mostly cat pictures back then (Finney and Buddy, that’s them on the far left and right of the banner), and about my books, of course. The paperback for The Restless Sleep was coming out, and I’d already started on my next book about the former Parapsychology Laboratory of Duke University.
I was still doing commentaries for NPR’s All Things Considered at the time. I haven’t done a commentary for them in I don’t know how many years, but publishers keep putting it in my bio. I understand why they do that. I once mentioned my embarrassment about it to my former producer and he was very understanding. They know why publishers do that, too.
I was also still drumming with Manhattan Samba! This is me at the Halloween Parade in 2005, with fellow drummers Ellen and Maddy. Maddy lives in Florida now, but Ellen still drums with Manhattan Samba and I just saw her and the band at the annual Dance Parade. In fact, I’ll include a picture of her now, with the band. Scroll down to see it. That’s her on the far right. Do something in your life that makes you as happy as Ellen is, drumming in the band.
June 4, 2025
I’m Reading at KGB’s!
Monday, June 10, 2025 @7pm
KGB Reading Series
85 E. 4th Street
My new book titled The Killing Fields of East New York: The First Subprime Mortgage Scandal, a White-Collar Crime Spree, and the Collapse of an American Neighborhood came out in January! I’ll be reading with Carrie Courogen, author of Miss May Does Not Exist: The Life and Work of Elaine May, Hollywood’s Hidden Genius, Lucian Truscott, a former Village Voice staff writer, author of Dress Gray, and Jonathan Coleman, author of the true crime classic At Mother’s Request and the biography of basketball titan Jerry West, West by West, My Charmed, Tormented Life.
May 22, 2025
Book Events for The Killing Fields of East New York
My new book titled The Killing Fields of East New York: The First Subprime Mortgage Scandal, a White-Collar Crime Spree, and the Collapse of an American Neighborhood came out on January 28, 2025. I have a few book-related events coming up.
June 10, 2025
KGB Reading Series
85 E. 4th Street, 7PM
August 13, 2025
Bryant Park Author Series
A panel about crime with author Peter Moskos.
Details to come.
August 27, 2025
Book Talk, West Islip Public Library
3 Higbie Lane, West Islip, NY, 7PM
October, 2025
Book Talk, Cypress Hills Local Development Center/United Community Centers.
Details to come.
May 20, 2025
The Wowee Whistle is Coming back!
Someone is bringing back the Wowee Whistle! It’s a Halloween candy I have been missing these since childhood, I can’t wait!! https://woweewaxwhistles.com/
May 6, 2025
Clifford Glover
In 1967, President Johnson established The Kerner Commission to determine the reasons for riots that had erupted throughout the nation. Their conclusion was breathtakingly simple. America is a racist country. “Segregation and poverty have created in the racial ghetto a destructive environment totally unknown to most white Americans . . . White institutions created it, white institutions maintain it, and white society condones it.”
According to Johnson’s committee, among the most serious problems, in a long list of them were the police, unemployment, and housing discrimination. Racism in America was so bad and so systemic, that only a “compassionate, massive, and sustained” effort could even begin to address it. The Commission had found that complaints of police brutality were shockingly legitimate.
5 years later, 10-year-old Clifford Glover was shot in the back in Queens by police officer Thomas Shea. Shea claimed that he and his partner, who were in plain clothes and driving an unmarked car, had stopped Glover and his step-father to question them about a taxicab holdup. The step-father said the officers never identified themselves, and they took off running, thinking they were about to be robbed. Lending credence to his claim, the step-father had run and flagged down the first patrol car he saw and cried, “They’re shooting my son.”
The officers who’d chased and killed Clifford would give several versions of their story, until seemingly landing on the one they felt was the most plausible: the 4th grader had pointed a gun at them. No gun was ever found. At the trial, jurors were played a recording of Shea’s partner, Walter Scott, saying over the radio, “Die, you little fuck.” The voice wasn’t his, Scott claimed. The indifference to Clifford’s imminent death was shared. When Sergeant Thomas Donohue took the stand he testified that as he stood over Clifford, the boy said, “I’m dying.” Without a measure of kindness or compassion for the frightened child he answered, “That’s right … you’re dying.” Shea was acquitted.
The picture is of an article in the Daily News.


