A split second description of the assassination of President Kennedy and the killing of Officer Tippit, based on the acoustic recording, photos, videos, expert witnesses, affidavits by witnesses and time-line analysis. Why it's easy to demonstrate, the evidence given to the Warren Commission by members of the Dallas police, was all created. There are 44 photos and illustrations in, 'Ambush in Dealey Plaza'. Many prove Lee Oswald did not kill President Kennedy or Officer Tippit. LookBack Publications
Every aspect of the JFK assassination is so detailed that it takes a book to deliver the results of the murder. It makes me sad to read about the lies and manipulation of facts. Most people have known for many years about the discrepancies between The Warren Commission vs the facts.
This was a thorough compilation of the facts many people who followed the events of November 22, 1963 have always believed to be the truth. Lee Oswald did not commit the crime he was charged with. Our nation depends on the rule of law. It is way past time that the truth is admitted to.
This is a short book (around 100 pages) which tells the author's version of what happened in the JFK assassination and why. It is presented in an easy to understand manner with many pictures. However, the book is in dire need of an editor. There are too many misspellings of names and way too many commas. I had to take one star off just due to the poor (or lack of) editing. Most of the information presented has been presented elsewhere, but the author takes all of the diverse sources and weaves it into a believable narrative.
I felt the author and the book covered a wide area of high points in the assassination event in a surface manner; and mentioned some of the curious aspects that were possible points of erroneous information or possibly planned misinformation used to change the actual narrative of events.
This would be an excellent first book for one who is new to the assassination event, because it out lines important issues without going deep into rabbit holes and alternative theories, but does point out certain areas of discrepancy.
The book is a quick elementary read that heads into the right direction of events. Due to it’s surface level coverage, it is informative and a quick read. Perfect for beginning readers who are beginning to dive into the event.
The author has a lot of "facts" gathered, but his logic and conclusions are questionable. His grammar is atrocious. He continually uses "it's", which ALWAYS mesons "it is" and nothing else, instead of "its", the third person possessive. Either his editor is grammatically deaf, too, or hopelessly careless. I would have given his writing a "D" as a high school English teacher. Not worth the time to read.
I was in high school when this terrible tragedy took place and have read multiple books searching for answers as to what actually happened and why. In my estimation this has been the most comprehensive. I liked the author's format. It was plain and simple. "Here's the facts, you make the decision". I wish I could find a hard copy.
Outstanding dissection of the crime and cover up. This book has convinced me of the government coverup. I am still confused about LBJ role. Was he in on the planning, or complicit in covering up the crime? Was he really afraid of WW3 or was he giving the CIA the go ahead with Vietnam, and deepsixing JFKs plan to pull all US troops out? More work to be done for historians. Murdoch does a fine job of shredding the Warren Report and making the magic bullet a sick and dishonest attempt to rewrite the truth.
I’m getting so frustrated with these books that contain interesting ideas and solid documentation, but have numerous typos, grammatical errors, and repeated sentences and paragraphs. I guess I’ve been reading so many books about the Kennedy assassination lately that I didn’t find anything ew here, though there were some interesting tidbits.
A very interesting read behind some facts concerning the assassination of President Kennedy. Especially at a time when more and more people are losing trust/faith in those who govern.
This book is filled with some good information… and about 5,000 too many commas (except in the index, where they are badly needed and missing). Get an editor next time.