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The Mammoth Book of New CSI

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This fresh look at crime scene investigations focuses on gruesome crimes the world over. Most of the cases are modern or have recently been reopened, often as a result of advances in forensic science.

512 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 2012

28 people are currently reading
222 people want to read

About the author

Nigel Cawthorne

316 books124 followers
Nigel Cawthorne is an Anglo-American writer of fiction and non-fiction, and an editor. He has written more than 80 books on a wide range of subjects and has contributed to The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph Daily Mail and The New York Times. He has appeared on television and BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

Many of Nigel Cawthorne's books are compilations of popular history, without footnotes, references or bibliographies. His own web site refers to a description of his home as a "book-writing factory" and says, "More than half my books were commissioned by publishers and packagers for a flat fee or for a for a reduced royalty".

One of his most notable works was Taking Back My Name, an autobiography of Ike Turner, with whom he spent a number of weeks working with him on, taking up residence in Turner's house. The book caused much controversy, resulting in court cases for three years following its release.

Cawthorne currently lives in Bloomsbury, London with his girlfriend and son, Colin (born 1982).

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5 stars
33 (20%)
4 stars
58 (36%)
3 stars
54 (33%)
2 stars
12 (7%)
1 star
3 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Sara .
565 reviews5 followers
July 20, 2023
This was an interesting book on true crime and the many ways police caught their killers. Some interesting cases, some I had never heard of before.
Profile Image for Jurie .
2 reviews
September 18, 2016
Only a few stories were good. I agree with some others who've read this book and feels like it's just a jumble of cases. Sometimes the writer even include unnecessary details which is distracting and not necessary, such as include all snippets of 27 missing persons of a single serial killer. We know it's a serial killer, no need to drill in the fact there. Point made.
Profile Image for Monica.
370 reviews3 followers
January 14, 2020
An interesting look at 31 criminal cases from all over the world, some I'd never heard of before.

I do have to mention whoever did the proof-reading of this dropped the ball, there were quite a lot of typos, some of which made sentences difficult to make sense of.

All in all though a pretty good read for crime-buffs.
Profile Image for Brenda.
865 reviews10 followers
October 13, 2015
It's basically a rehash of 31 cases, some familiar, some not, but it's not a teaching tool for forensic science, it's really nothing more than rehashed summaries. not recommended for anyone
Profile Image for Lucii Dixon.
1,104 reviews54 followers
October 26, 2020
This book is incredibly detailed, though could do with an editor, so many errors and spelling issues that it couldn’t be easily ignored.

Each case brings incredible evidence forward, it details the crime scenes spectacularly, though there’s always room for improvement. Like I know there’s a fair bit missing from the Madeleine McCann chapter at the beginning and again this author tried to point the finger AWAY from the parents instead of showing the evidence that actually points at them.

I did skip two plane crash chapters because they were incredibly boring, naming a tonne of things on planes that I didn’t have a clue what was being said and was getting confused. I also skipped the Romanov chapter because I couldn’t pronounce anything and it was frustrating. But the rest of the chapters were amazing. My favourite has to be the McDonald case near the end. It was minutely detailed with a fine tooth comb and carried on beyond the conviction. I don’t believe McDonald did it personally as the evidence against others is too strong to be ignored. I feel there was a huge cover up because the military screwed up the whole crime scene. McDonald should never have been convicted on the circumstantial evidence that went towards him.

Overall, a greatly detailed book and very interfering. I’ve recommended this to others also but this does need re-editing majorly.
Profile Image for France-Andrée.
687 reviews26 followers
January 27, 2020
Some of these stories were interesting, but if you are a fan of investigation discovery and the likes, you will have heard of the majority of them in details. I would have wished for crimes a little less known though in a couple of chapters OJ and Tim McVeigh) I did learn things I didn’t know at the times or have forgotten since.
Profile Image for Yolande.
34 reviews
January 7, 2018
Eh! Not sure... Some of the cases are interesting, and the crime scene work is good (or top-notch) for the year. Some cases seem to be in the book only to show you the (often evident to us readers) mistakes made during the investigation.
Profile Image for Alison Clifford.
Author 11 books43 followers
February 9, 2019
Didn't actually read all of it as I skipped things that didn't grab me. I found this to have lots of theories, but not anywhere as near as much hard CSI evidence detailed as I'd hoped. More claims than hard facts. Disappointing.
Profile Image for B McCullagh.
10 reviews
August 21, 2023
Expected this to be better. A few too many mistakes and typos. Some stories I hadn't heard of and I did find interesting and well written, hence the 3 star. Would potentially put me off trying his other books.
Profile Image for Cat..
1,921 reviews
November 24, 2012
This book reminded me so much of the sorts of books I read as a child (although more gory than those, of course) that it was a little disconcerting to have a case from one of those childhood books get mentioned in passing in the midst of discussing one of the cases in this book.

OJ is in here, as is the OK City bombing, and several other not-as-well-known cases. The discussion of the Jeffrey McDonald case was fascinating. There are several British cases I'd not heard of; not a surprise as this was published in England.

Quite enjoyable.
Profile Image for Chris.
348 reviews14 followers
September 1, 2015
When I bought this book I thought it would be about how Crime Scene Investigators work and how they end up coming to their conclusions. This book is not about CSI. In fact it doesn't mention procedure much, at all. It is more about past crimes, some well-known, others not so, and what happened in those crimes. There are, however, and quite importantly, a lot of errors in the book which you will discover if you read the chapter in question then watch the footage of the crime on YouTube. Despite this I really enjoyed the book and found it fascinating in places. Be warned though that some video footage is quite gruesome in places.
Profile Image for Maria Yohana.
5 reviews17 followers
January 21, 2013
this book is contain of several stories included celebrities scandals or just common cases that complicated enough so CSI have to do their work to solve it.

this book is extremely detail about the CSI procedure until sometimes, i just skipped it a few paragraphs just because i'm not really understand about their term of words. but this book is quite good enough though.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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