A part of me wishes that serial killers were more frequent than within-the-family homicides, because Ann Rule's novels on Gary Ridgway and Ted Bundy are her two best.
However, this is the dilemma in reading true crime. Is it really ever okay to ENJOY what you are reading? I gave the Bundy book 5 stars, but I'm sure that many might disagree.
I've read several of Ann's Crime Files books, and as soon as I read them I generally forget pretty quickly what the stories were even about. I think that happens when so many stories are packed into one book.
This book contains only four new stories, and the last two are so short that I find myself wishing they hadn't been tacked on at all. There is no time to get emotionally connected to the cases.
The first two, however, certainly held my interest. In particular, the second case: "Too Late for the Fair" about Bob Hansen, his "missing" wife Joann, and their bruised and battered kids (literally and metaphorically). It is no surprise that murder suspects usually have led pretty fucked up lives. Or, at least, more fucked up than the usual family. Bob Hansen was abused and carried this on to his wife and children. But his children, having lost their mom to their dad's violent ways at very young ages, do not grow up very well-adjusted. The lone girl, Kandy Kay, becomes addicted to heroin and eventually dies from an overdose. Nick becomes transgendered Nicole. Ty, the baby, grows up the most normal - surprising, considering that he gets the brunt of Bob's fists. He was too young to remember his mother but soldiers on today in hopes of recovering her body. Well into his 80s, Bob Hansen committed suicide by carbon monoxide poisoning. By this time he had disinherited his children, grandchildren and even his lone best friend Marv. He gave his estate, valued at $5 million, to a couple in Costa Rica that he had known for quite some time. This was the most compelling case to me because of how much one woman's murder affected so many people, and how one man's cold-blooded heart dripped onto everyone he came in contact with until the poison set in. I sincerely hope that Ty is one day able to find his mother's remains.
If you did not know, Ann Rule accepts suggestions for her Crime Files books. You can contact her with a case suggestion through a form found at her website: annrules.com.