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Love Me to Death: A Journalist's Memoir of the Hunt for Her Friend's Killer

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Acclaimed true-crime journalist Linda Wolfe recounts a powerful true-life crime story of her own—her search for the serial killer who murdered her friend

In 1983 Jacqui Bernard was found dead. She was a philanthropist, a writer, an activist, and a friend of Linda Wolfe’s. Two years after she was killed, the police had a name: Ricardo Caputo, a handsome, charming Latin American man who had stabbed, choked, and strangled his first three victims. He had tortured his next two victims and beaten them to death. The target of an international FBI manhunt, Caputo enjoyed a twenty-plus-year crime spree that took him all throughout America and across the Mexican border. In 1994 Caputo turned himself in, confessing to the slayings of four women, but not to the murder of Jacqui Bernard.
 
Seeking closure, Wolfe embarked on a journey that took her into police precincts, lawyers’ and psychiatrists’ offices, the homes of the victims’ families, and prison, where she conducted three interviews with Caputo as he awaited trial.
 
At once intimate and visceral, Love Me to Death is an enthralling true tale of crime and punishment and the evil that resides in the darkest corners of the human psyche. 

Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2014

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About the author

Linda Wolfe

36 books11 followers
Linda Wolfe is an award-winning journalist and novelist. Among her many books are the novel "Private Practices" and the nonfiction books "Wasted: The Preppie Murder," "The Professor and the Prostitute," and "The Murder of Dr. Chapman." A longtime contributing editor at New York magazine, Wolfe's articles and personal essays have also appeared in The New York Times, Vanity Fair, Playboy, and many other publications. Her short fiction has appeared in the Southwest Review and other literary journals. Learn more at www.LindaWolfe.com.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Fishface.
3,297 reviews242 followers
January 23, 2016
Now I'm sorry I put this off so long. What a great read. The author spends years and travels to South America and Mexico investigating the murder of a friend, who appears to have been part of an international series of killings that is unusual for a number of reasons. She has the cooperation and input of the prosecutor's office, defense attorney, forensic specialists and the accused as well as that of his family. There is nothing ordinary about this case or his victims. There is even a pit bull in here named Truman Caputo.
Profile Image for Ronnie Cramer.
1,031 reviews34 followers
April 8, 2019
This is the third book I've read recently that is more about the process of writing a true crime book than it is about the crimes themselves. This one is marginally better than the others (I'LL BE GONE IN THE DARK and A MURDER IN MUSIC CITY), but it's still not a style that calls to me. Before interviewing a multiple murderer, the author contacts a detective and asks for advice; the exchange that follows is illustrative:

"...do you have any tips for me? Any suggestions about how to question him?”
“Just be friendly. Get him talking.”
“I did. And he told me some interesting things. But mostly, he was banal.”
“End of story,” [the inspector] said. “Most murderers are banal. It’s just their crimes that are interesting.”

That's the problem in a nutshell, and why most effective true crime books focus on the crimes.
Profile Image for Jan.
295 reviews6 followers
February 17, 2011
An interesting memoir about the authors investigation of a serial murderer who she feels also murder her friend.
Profile Image for Jen.
1,588 reviews
November 30, 2021

I feel that the title is a bit misleading. The author knew Jacqui Bernard but calling her a “friend” seemed a bit of a stretch. In fact, I felt like Jacqui was ironically the victim I knew the least about in the end. I suppose “acquaintance” isn’t quite as catchy, though.

Most of the book is about how the author, Linda, struggles to put the pieces together not only about whether or not Ricardo Caputo killed her “friend” but also why he killed the women in his life and why he turned himself in eventually.

Linda’s writing style felt down to earth. I liked knowing the author’s feelings regarding everything related to Caputo and especially enjoyed seeing her disregard his many attempts to blame the victims and his past.

There’s some interesting psychology discussed regarding Caputo’s motives. Most surprising was Linda befriending Ricardo’s family and putting aside the disgust and fear she felt to get the deepest scoop of all.

I thought this book did a good job balancing the lives of the victims with the portrayal of the serial killer. My only complaint is that I wish there were more photos of the victims than of the killer.

This wasn’t as captivating as other true crime books I’ve read but interesting, nonetheless. The ending is a good reminder of how some mysteries are never truly solved.

3.5 stars!
Profile Image for Bill reilly.
663 reviews15 followers
August 11, 2022
Ricardo Caputo is a serial killer with a different M.O. than most. Instead of killing strangers, Ricky murdered women he had seduced. Linda Wolfe managed to track down a few who had survived the psychopath and their stories are amazing. In Mexico, Caputo had hooked up with a wealthy young model named Laura Gomez and it did not end well for the entitled lass. After his first murder in 1971, he had escaped a minimum security nut house in NY City and killed the psychiatrist who befriended him. They had become lovers. A laundry list of women who were looking for Mr. Goodbar and found him is astonishing. The human race continues to fascinate and bewilder me. In between the murders, Ricardo had married a seventeen year-old Mexican beauty queen and lived a seemingly normal family life with their four children. Neighbors described him as a great guy. Wolfe put her heart and soul into this book, travelling to Argentina to interview Caputo's mother and to Westchester County Jail to meet her son. Love me to Death is a great read.
Profile Image for Carol Palmer.
609 reviews6 followers
June 6, 2019
Of the 5 true crime books by this author that I've read, this is far and away the best in my opinion. Perhaps this was because she was a friend of one of the killer's possible victims. She seemed to have a personal interest in this case, which really brought life to the story. Good book.
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