content warning: book describes rape, murder, attempted murder, home invasion, descriptions related to child molestation, gunplay, and manslaughter
I think Mark Bowden is the best crime reporter working today. It was Edna Buchanan, but she is writing mystery novels now, and I say God bless her. The thing I love about Bowden is that he gets out of the way of the people he writes about. He puts their words and stories and emotions first rather than talking about himself and his efforts and emotions. In this book, you will read about . . .
* people who say things like, "Yes, we had sex, but it wasn't rape" (reader, it was rape)
* detectives who say things like, "A crime victim can't just disappear" (reader, she did just disappear, but in a way that was impossible to figure out without an investigation that took hundreds of hours)
* suspects who say things like, "Sure, we talked about how I would have sex with her children, but just sending messages about child molestation isn't a crime" (reader, it is if the person sending messages agrees to meet the children's mother at a location and brings condoms—fortunately, the mother was a detective and the children were imaginary)
* detectives who say things like, "Women just don't do breaking and entering jobs" (reader, this shows not only sexism but also a lack of imagination)
* drunk people who say things like, "Bring me my gun, I know what I'm doing" (reader, this one ends very badly for an innocent man)
* prosecutors who say things like, "You can't listen to rumors about an unsolved shooting" (reader, you can if you reexamine the forensic evidence and reinterview witnesses and figure out who is telling some or all of the truth)
* people who say, "Even if you get to the bottom of it all and figure out what really happened, you're never going to leave everyone satisfied with the outcome of the case" (actually, this last one is true)