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The Ma Barker Giveaway

The Ma Barker Giveaway

Send Ma Barker to the New York Times Bestseller’s list

Ma Barker: America’s Most Wanted Mother by Howard Kazanjian and Chris Enss tells the story of the Gangster Era criminals whose mother literally let them get away with murder. Ma Barker is unique in criminal history. Although she was involved in numerous illegal activities for more than twenty years she was never arrested, fingerprinted, or photographed perpetrating a crime. Yet Ma controlled two dozen gang members who did exactly as she told them.

Step 1 – Enter the Ma Barker giveaway!
Enter for your chance to win a Ma Barker gift basket which includes a two-night stay at a resort in one of Ma Barker’s favorite hideout cities, Reno, Nevada.
(You can also enter the GoodRead’s Ma Barker Giveaway, opens in a new tab so you can finish here.)

Step 2 – Pre-order the book so you are eligible to win!
As soon as you complete the entry form below, you will be redirected to Amazon.com to Pre-Order the book. Make sure you complete your purchase in order to confirm your eligibility.

Visit www.chrisenss.com to enter!
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Published on September 01, 2016 09:34 Tags: 1930s, chris-enss, crime, gangsters, hoover, ma-barker, mothers, the-depression

Unsettling and Ruthless

It’s the scariest giveaway ever.

Enter now to win a copy of the new book
Ma Barker: America’s Most Wanted Mother.

Everything Ma Barker’s fugitive sons grew up to be they
owed to their mother.


Kate Barker wanted the nice things of life: the lovely home, the fine clothes, and lots of money in the bank. She ended up with a police slug in her heart and $10,200 in her wallet.

According to the FBI records Kate Barker was an overbearing mother who somehow lost her way on the path of motherly love. In attempting to guide, she misguided. In trying to spread affection, she nurtured hate. In her attempts to fulfill a warped sense of motherly duty, she literally loved her sons to death. Ma Barker was a woman who saw crime as a means to an end, but who never counted on things ending like they did.

To learn more about Ma Barker and her boys read
Ma Barker: America’s Most Wanted Mother.
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Published on October 10, 2016 11:46 Tags: 1930s, chris-enss, crime, depression-era-crime, gangsters, missouri, oklahoma

The End of An Era

Don‘t keep Ma waiting. Enter now to win a copy of
Ma Barker: America’s Most Wanted Mother.


In a time when notorious Depression-era criminals were terrorizing the country, the Barker-Karpis Gang stole more money than mobsters John Dillinger, Vern Miller, and Bonnie and Clyde combined. Five of the most wanted thieves, murderers, and kidnappers by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in the 1930s were from the same family. Authorities believed the woman behind the band of violent hoodlums that ravaged the Midwest was their mother, Kate “Ma” Barker.



On January 14, 1939, immediately following an autopsy of the slain convicted kidnapper Arthur Barker, a staff member at the San Francisco Coroner’s Office made a death mask of the dead man’s face.

A memorandum written by a representative of the San Francisco division of the FBI noted that a plaster mold of Arthur’s face had to be made as close to his death as possible. “Well before bloating and the elements distort the character of expression,” the memo read. The process of making the mold was included in the note dated April 20, 1939. “Apply grease to the face and especially any facial hair, including eyebrows. Once the plaster dries layer plaster bandages mixed with water on the face. The first layer captures the details, even wrinkles, while the other layers reinforce the first. Then carefully remove the hardened mold, or negative, from the face. Finally, pour a substance like wax or a metal such as bronze into the negative to make a positive, three-dimensional death mask.”

The memo, outlining the dos and don’ts of making a death mask, was addressed to J. Edgar Hoover’s office. “This is a good death mask,” the note read. “I am arranging for a negative mold of the same to be made at once so that several copies can be made and used in the Director’s office or wherever else it may be considered desired to exhibit.”

The mask made of Arthur’s face was not the first FBI Director Hoover requested to be made. He had one poured of gangster John Dillinger in July 1934. Four masks of Dillinger’s face were made, and Hoover proudly had one on display in his office. The mask captured every detail of Dillinger’s face: the bullet wound, the scrapes from where he had hit the pavement, the bloating and the swelling from the heat and pooling blood, and even the tell-tale signs of underground plastic surgery. Arthur’s mask was just as telling. His original death mask was placed for safe keeping in the glass exhibit case on displaying moulage (the process of making molds) in the front exhibit room of the San Francisco coroner’s laboratory.


To learn more about Ma Barker and he Barker Gang read Ma Barker: America’s Most Wanted Mother.

Register to win a free book here or at www.chrisenss.com.
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