A true-crime shocker of a Southern town shattered by a brutal murder.
As seen on America’s Most Wanted .
Crime never happened in a town like Madisonville, Kentucky. That’s why the vicious slaughter of one of its beloved female citizens was so stunning. Even more so was the identity of the killer whose flight from the law made him one of the FBI’s Most Wanted.
I've been looking forward to reading this book because the crime occurred in my home town and my father is one of the individuals in the story. It provided an insider's view into a family's four-year nightmare that began following the grisly murder of an elderly woman.
Finished today. I did think it was an interesting read but not extraordinary. Not worth the raving reviews I read on amazon.com to be honest. Writing was okay, the story not so much. Except if you are in the middle of it of course.
One thing that annoyed me. There were 3 people that gave tips to the whereabouts of the killer. The author only praised one of them because this person had said to give his or her reward money to charity. The author thought he/she was a hero. Well I do not agree. The other 2 also picked up the phone. You do not know how they live, if they were poor and maybe the one who she thought to be a hero, was rich? In my eyes all 3 were hero's. not just the one who did not want/need the reward.
Another thing I noticed the tone of the author towards Earl got meaner and meaner during the book lol. Even that he took just one zip of water meant he was acting. (and this is just 1 example) I do not know how many times I've read that Jack, the author's husband was definitely the victim's favorite cousin. Those are the things why I prefer my true crime books not to be written by family though.
Personally knowing, or at one time met, 95% of the people connected with this story makes my review difficult. Previously I only knew the details as they filtered long distance through my parents: the occasional mention during a phone call or the newspaper clipping sent by mail.
I've been meaning to buy this book since it came out, and would like to thank my mother for finally gifting it to me this Christmas.
But to the work at hand: once I overlooked the romanticized depiction of my old hometown, the facts of the crime were well reported and from the unique perspective of close family members.
This was a good one. The story was interesting and told from an unusual viewpoint -- a family member married to a criminal investigator helping move things along. I really liked the way the author handled the court proceedings -- instead of bogging us down in everyevasion, hyperbole and objection she simply presented to us the picture painted by the prosecutor as the evidence came out.
What a heartbreaking story. This book is so well written it had me on a roller coaster of emotions. Quick and smooth read but not a easy read because of the subject.. Nothing was overdone, not the set up, not the story and not the court case.
Branson, Mary Kinney and Jack Branson Murder in Mayberry: Greed, Death, and Mayhem in a Small Town (2008) ***** Well-penned account replete with local color
[Although the details in a true crime book are known, I want the potential reader of this review to BEWARE of possible SPOILERS!:]
The perp here is Russell Winstead, age about 40, height six foot one, weight probably about 180 pounds. He has all the makings of a classical sociopath, but as yet nobody knows it because he hasn’t really stepped over the line. He’s charming to women. He has an indulgent father in Earl Winstead, and an even more accommodating rich aunt named Ann Branson. Why he needs to be indulged is because of his gambling addiction. He tried NASCAR racing. He liked the rush but he didn’t have the talent. Then he discovered blackjack and saw himself as a professional gambler. He loved playing the role of the high roller, getting comp’ed, having a casino limo pick him up, flashing Bengies all over the place, impressing cocktail waitress, etc. Only problem was Russell Winstead was a loser.
So one night, the night of January 12, 2003 to be exact, he goes once more to the well that is 86-year-old Ann Branson for another “loan.” He’s already in debt to her for maybe $70,000 and apparently she refuses. In a rage, he chases her down the basement stairs and crushes her skull with a blunt instrument and then goes on to stab her some seventy or so times.
Enter Mary Kinney Branson, wife of Ann Branson’s other nephew Jack Branson, then a US Treasure Special Agent, now retired. He’s about the same height as Russell, but there the similarities end. Where Russell is reckless and uncaring about other people, Jack is careful and very caring. Where Russell fails and needs propping up, Jack succeeds. Where Russell is vain about his looks and worries about a growing bald spot, Jack is modest and his hairline is not receding. So in a sense this is a story about the contrasting lives of these two men.
Mary Branson tells the story from some distance because she is not a blood relative, and as she says, in Madisonville, Kentucky, “blood matters.” (Note that, as in “The Andy Griffith Show” and “Mayberry RFD” there is no actual Mayberry. The “Mayberry” in the title is a state of mind. Call it the mind and the lifestyle of a small town in America.)
What sets this true crime story apart from many others I have read is the fact that Mary, through her husband Jack and his connections, and through her being a member of the family and the community, is in an enviable (if that’s the right word) position for getting the true milieu of the story. Furthermore, since she is a veteran writer of children’s stories, you can be sure that her prose is clear, readable, and without any four-letter words. What I found most fascinating and what kept me turning the pages were the many lifestyle details that Mary Branson gives of the people involved and the portrait she paints of the small town life and its values—not to mention how she also reveals herself, sometimes inadvertently. I’ll just mention the nearly constant eating out at fast food establishments!
Here’s an example of Mary Branson at her most vivid: The trial has begun and she’s watching. She writes, “Once, I’d walked into our family room to find our three-year-old grandson, Taylor, holding his eyelids open as he watched a cartoon on television. I asked what he was doing and he said, ‘I’m keeping my eyes from blinking. This is my favorite part of the cartoon, and I don’t want to miss even one second.’”
Mary explains, “That’s how I felt as David [the prosecutor:] presented the prosecution’s case. After being information starved for so many years, I was scooping up every crumb that came my way.” (p. 256)
Like her husband Jack, Mary looks before she leaps and she doesn’t make rash statements. Consider the case of Ann Branson’s housekeeper, Judy, as an example of the care that Mary has taken in weaving this story.
Judy believed that one of two persons other than Russell committed the crime. She insisted on that from the beginning, even going so far as to make some very questionable testimony at the trial, seemingly in an effort to protect Russell. Was she too, like some other women in the story, charmed by Russell? Mary Branson does not say. What she does instead is report the questionable testimony, and note that through it all Judy remained friends with Russell’s father, Earl, who incidentally (or not so incidentally) was the executor of Ann Branson’s estate.
Here’s another example: on page 272 Mary Branson notes that local cop Captain Randy Hargis was initially in charge of the investigation, and had been a “longtime friend of Russell. The two had played softball together and ridden four-wheelers.” Then she adds:
“Hargis testified that his primary reason for inviting Ben Wolcott to join the investigation was to give the Madisonville Police Department access to the Kentucky State Police crime lab and other resources.”
Mary Branson is not saying directly that Hargis wouldn’t or couldn’t be objective in handling the case (or that he’s lying). She is merely pointing out softly the potential conflict of interest.
Here’s some local color near the end: “Thirty miles away in Madisonville, the verdict was announced on the radio a little before 11:30 a.m. Someone who’d just heard the verdict stepped inside a local bank and called out: “’Guilty!’ Everyone knew immediately what he meant. Customers and employees applauded.”
--a review by Dennis Littrell
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
While it was interesting to read a true crime novel from the perspective of a victims family member, the telling left a lot to be desired. Too many tiny details caused it to drag, and the end was one of the only times I truly wanted to keep reading. The only thing that pushed me to finish were the authors loving and intricate memories of Ann
My boyfriend works out of town sometimes and l picked this book up on my spring break. l read this book in the hotel while he was at work. This book was well written and had me on a roller coaster of emotions. The writers held my attention from the very first page. What is so heartbreaking that this story is based on a real-life event that happened.
I'm from Madisonville. I've driven past that house on North Main about a million times throughout my life. I was in high school when Ann Branson was found dead. I remember the rumors and media surrounding it well. By the time the trial started I was in college in another town and not aware of many details of the case. So although I was vaguely familiar with the crime I learned much from this book and the case itself is very interesting. That said....
Oh brother. I had never eyerolled while reading a book before. Branson acknowledges in the preface that she's probably going to sever ties with Madisonville through this book and that it is a personal account and not meant to be seen as a true-crime book (although she has to know that many will classify it as such). So I shouldn't fault her on any of that but I will say that this book needed an editor... badly. Too many unimportant details. My eyes about rolled out of my sockets every time she mentioned that her husband was Ann's "favorite" (about every 5-10 pages). Her husband must have the biggest head in the world after all that hero-worship from her. The fact that I'm from Madisonville already puts me at a bias because I know of some of the "characters" and any insinuations about the character of the town or townspeople felt like a personal attack. But on its own the story is very compelling. I just think an impartial third party would have written it better.
A good example of why it is probably not a good idea for a person to write a book describing the murder of a family member, even if I might add, the author isn't a blood relative of the victim. For some reason this is a big deal, as is the fact that her husband is the favorite nephew, something the reader is reminded of throughout the book. So, the favorite nephew, "more like a son than a nephew," is a federal agent. You might think he would understand crimes aren't usually solved and the trial held in the same amount of time as a crime on the CSI or Law & Order series. While described as loving, caring, and determined to get justice, being the favorite and all, he instead comes across as an overbearing, impatient, perhaps even arrogant big city fed who certainly knows more (at least according to his wife) than the state and local cops. Some things I would like to know. The town is described as being like Mayberry but we don't really learn much about the dynamics of the town other than that the author doesn't think much of the local police force. If it is "Mayberry," it obviously has a seamy side I never saw on the Andy Griffith show. What has happened to the coal mines she refers to briefly? Why are there so many casino's? Spending some time placing the events in the context of the town rather than constantly reminding us of her feelings and emotions would have made this more interesting.
This book held my interest from the first page. I remember seeing this crime featured on "America's Most Wanted", and that the perpetrator had fled to Costa Rica to escape the death penalty.
The murder victim was an 85 year old lady, who was brutally killed in a small town in Kentucky in 2003. The nephew of the victim was a federal agent, and his wife is a professional writer. This combination is highly unusual among authors.
The book will keep you riveted to your seat, and the identity of the perpetrator will surprise you.
I picked this up because this story happened in a hometown of a few of my friends and they told me they would drive me by the house in which the crime happened. I am all about the immersive experience lol. In all seriousness, this book was heartbreaking and even more so knowing the authors were close relatives to the murder victim. You will question who the killer is up until the reveal.
Coming from the same town, it was such a devastating act of pure evil and violence. The niece and nephew did an amazing job in writing this book as how it occurred from an addicted gambler to a full blooded murderer, not to mention it was his own Aunt whom live he took.
At the same time I was reading this, I read an account of American society in which it was compared to a casino. Private equity, junk bonds, leveraged buyouts, and gambling on the stock market called to mind Russell, the gambling addict and suspect in a financially motivated killing. It didn't go well for him. He had women who loved him and thousands of dollars. But it all slipped through his hands, as often happens with addiction. An account by family members of the murder victim.
Interesting reading. This book has a lot of details and insight about the long process that goes into solving and apprehending the murderer. It was very moving because a member of the family was in law enforcement and he shared a lot of information about the frustration felt by the family and members of law enforcement that were working so hard to bring the murderer to justice.
I definitely feel this was a story to be told, unfortunately a lot of things were missing from it and a lot of unnecessary whining about not being informed of ALL things throughout the investigation.
This was the first true crime I've read written by the victims family and I was turned off by just how much of it appeared to be attention seeking. Very sad.
I don't want to disrespect the victim's family, so I won't say much. What I will say is this book was very disconnected. The pacing was never consistent. The ideas felt out of place sometimes (a lot of tangents). And it just wasn't what I felt it was trying to be. I felt I found out more about the tragedy through a quick Google search.
I love true crime, so my mother picked this up at a thrift store for me. I had never read any books by Branson, and wasn't sure what to expect. I thought Branson did a great job, although (at times) she seemed overly concerned about what she wore on specific dates. I would recommend this book to other true crime lovers.
A true-crime story about the murder of a popular, multimillionaire woman written by her niece-in-law. While the book had a unique perspective, I felt the blurb on the back cover made it sound like it was going to be much more sordid than it was. That is a good thing, of course, considering it was an event that actually happened to real people, but I kept expecting the big surprise as to the "why", when it was addressed rather quickly and wasn't very surprising. There were parts of the book that seemed to repeat themselves, almost verbatim. However, I enjoy reading the hows and whys of true crime, and this allowed a peek into the perspective of the victim's family.
When town native Ann Branson was found murdered in her basement in Madisonville, Kentucky townspeople were shocked. Crimes like murder just didn't happen in Madisonville. It was unheard of. A retired federal agent, Ann's nephew Jack Branson will not let his aunt's case die; and it is unheard of to Jack that all clues in his aunt's murder start to point to a member of his own family.
I have to say that the plot of this true crime book was a little slow for me and even though the crime was horrible, the writing was somewhat fanciful in parts. I give this story a B+!
This was an interesting true crime story but still unsure after 2 days of mulling it over on whether I cared for the style it was written in. It was written in almost too friendly of a way and I found that offsetting. It's different and maybe that's what threw me off with this one...I doubt it's one that will stay in my memory for long. I'm pretty sure I won't pick up any more of her books if they're true crimes. Just not a stand out true crime book for me.
This book was left on the reading shelf of the bakery cafe I work in. Honestly, it caught my eye because Mayberry was in the title and it was a few days after Andy Griffith had died. I have read several true crime novels, but this one was different. Although it was written by a family member, it seemed very detached emotionally. Also, I didn't care for the short chapters. I felt as if it made the story kind of choppy.
Very well written. A very informative true crime book. I was surprised to read that this case was solved by America's Most Wanted. I was disappointed to learn that the criminal in this case was not given a life sentence simply because it violated an extradition agreement since he was found in another country. The sentence he received was not enough, but then again the life he took can never be returned, so justice never is really served in cases such as these. Sad all the way around.
I remember seeing this case on AMW and I'm glad to be able to read the details. Murder is so horrendous. When committed by a family member it is even worse. Addictions come in different forms and it's sad when a person loses complete control of themselves. Not only was this beautiful lady lost but I'm sure families were torn apart. The author did a great job with this book. I'm sure it was not easy to write. My sympathy and thank you for a well written book...