A collection of strange-but-true crime tales featuring cops, lawyers, and some very unusual suspects . . . The fact-finding folks at Bathroom Readers’ Institute have rounded up the best cops-and-robber articles we’ve ever done, plus a rogues’ gallery of new offenders. You’ll read about dumb crooks and criminal masterminds, mafia henchmen and low-level goons, ancient warriors and Old West gunslingers, crazed cops and jovial judges, and even a few loony lawyers and crooked Wall Street types. Find out about . . . * New York City’s “Mad Bomber” * The Biddle Brothers and the Queen of the Jail * Law and Special Pants Unit * Dopes who hide their dope in the strangest places * America’s first private eye * NASCAR’s bootlegging beginnings * The real pirates of the Caribbean * Why CSI makes the cops’ job even harder * Billy the Kid and other outlaws who died with their boots on * George Luger, Samuel Colt, and other fathers of guns * The greatest train robberies * Arrested for farting * And much more!
I think this is my least favourite Bathroom Reader. I've been reading them for ages and have been addicted to the sections on dumb crooks etc. that seem to be a part of each edition. There was just enough of those to keep me from quitting before I finished. This volume contains TOO much serious crime including histories of the Mafia, Yakuza etc. I would have been happier with a higher proportion of the lighter stuff.
This is a book from the same series as Impossible Questions, and the series has been one of my best discoveries from last years Book Expo America. The Uncle John´s Bathroom Readers Institute books. It´s a long time running collection, of nearly twenty years, but I just found them last year in New York City, and they have become instant favorites of mine because of their ease to read and because they deliver on their mission of creating good books to read in the John. The stories told are always about trivia, conversational starters and things that make you go "Huh, who would´ve thought!" Its pocket format makes it easier to be kept in the toilet from one visit to the throne until the next one. Read the full review
Another good bathroom reader. I've read a few of the larger collections that combine all kinds of stories which can throw you off guard a bit. One minute, you're reading a story about Ancient Rome and the next minute you are reading a story about Hollywood stars. This book narrows down the theme to crime related topics, but it still has a good amount of variety. It contains the predictable stories about famous crimes and criminals, but also has good stories about crime novelists and a recipe for how to make prison wine.
The book is just long enough to feel like you learned some about crime without being overburdened by random facts. I will read more of this type of book in the future.
This is one of those collections of fun facts and interesting stories. Some are a few pages, some are just a paragraph or two. Some little known facts about some cases you may have heard of, The Mad Bomber, The Hatfields and McCoys are two I remember. The stories are grouped together by a common thread, “Stupid Criminals”, “Zany Cops”, “Escape Artists”, these are examples not actual headings. This is one of those books you can read a little at a time, because the stories are a page or two, and it is a lot of stories.
Got the partial from NetGalley. It's an uncle John's bathroom reader. These books are always just awesome because you have little tidbits of things you never knew you wanted to know. And with true crime you get some of the dumbest criminals.
A life of crime is not for me. I don't want to say the people mentioned in this book are dumb but. How they managed to make it through the day is hard to imagine. Nice to read about how crime doesn't pay most of the time.
This book is great! I kept finding stories I just HAD to share with everyone. I kept reading the stories out loud to my family so that all of us could laugh together.