Ann Rule is a genius of our generation, a historian of the underreported, an advocate, a champion of women, victims, their families, a voice of the many, unnumbered missing.
I admire the author for her unrelenting search for the truth, her detective skills, and her inquisitive, digging dives into these case files. I enjoy her books because they read much like novels. She has a comfortable narrative, you can sit and get utterly lost without realizing it. Ann Rule never reads like non fiction.
Truth is indeed stranger than fiction, and I am grateful that there is someone who keeps these stories alive- they are important, they are part of our history as a society, as human beings. She unravels a bitter truth that society as a whole has always turned away from- there are monsters out there, they are real, and they are taking our children, our moms, our sisters. The monsters are not only real, they are among us and we might never even recognize that they're wearing a mask.
I have a sense of gratitude that I found Ann Rule when I was a young women. The cases intrigued me, and they were so graphic, so shocking, that I was at first a bit surprised that someone could stomach researching and writing something like it. As I read on, and felt the concern and respect she had for the families, I realized that she might be the only person left to remember some of these girls. The police have SO many cold cases, so many women missing, murdered, lost, abused...gone.
Her books contain graphic details, but encompass the story as a whole, and as you are reading, you feel a certain depth of loss that you don't feel with a fictional story...These things really happened, these were people you could have met, these are people with surviving family sitting somewhere, still today, maybe thinking, wondering, why.
We might never know if justice was served or not, but she delivers the facts, the story, and we can ponder these things within our own humanity. Her books gave me a necessary awareness as a young woman of the reality of the world, of the severity of domestic violence as a leading cause of death.
I will always look up to Ann Rule for having the balls to document these cases that society barely admits exist. She has been an inspiration to me, and I hope that there people that will pick up the torch she left and keep it lit for the lost.