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Overview""Has more than its fair share of violence, sex, debauchery and reversals of fortune . . . But what emerges between the lines are stories of human suffering, stories of class struggle, stories that speak as much to the criminal mind as to the crime itself."" -- Sun Newspapers More true tales of woe from Cleveland's crime and disaster expert. The fifth book in John Stark Bellamy's popular series delivers 26 accounts of Cleveland-area crimes and disasters from 1900 through 1950, including: The depression-era ""Blue Book Murder,"" in which a swank Shaker Heights society party was interrupted by low-class thugs with deadly intentions; Truculent barkeep Thomas Martin, whose idea of a good time was shooting the lunch buckets out of unsuspecting laborers' hands as they came off their Whiskey Island shifts; A strange international photo hoax in which Lakewood lad John May Warren became ""The boy with Hitler's face""; Sleepwalking Harry Krause, who dreamt one night of battling a gigantic snake but awoke to the real nightmare: he had strangled his own beloved mother in her bed; The shocking murder of sweet 16-year-old Beverly Jarosz in her Garfield Heights bedroom--one of Cleveland's most baffling murder mysteries ever; And 20 more local true stories of courage, fear, deception, treachery, tragedy, violence, and guilt. Sometimes gruesome, often surprising, Bellamy's tales are meticulously researched and delivered in a literate and entertaining style. Full Product DetailsAuthor: John Bellamy (University of Cambridge)Publisher: Gray & Company Publishers Imprint: Gray & Company Publishers Dimensions: Width: 14.10cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 21.80cm Weight: 0.327kg ISBN: 9781886228856ISBN 10: 188622885 Pages: 245 Publication Date: 31 March 2004 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAnd Bellamy clearly relishes his criminals. Sometimes he pokes fun. Sometimes he wonders at the humanity of it all. But always he tells his tales with sympathy, compassion and a good old-fashoned, if not antiquated, flair for storytelling. -- Book Reviewer Sun Newspapers Interesting how murder and mayhem can prod one's historical curiosity. Bellamy even makes it fun by including many familiar places--no matter where you're driving, you'll take the occasional detour to check out some of the book's ghoulish crime scenes. -- Book Reviewer Call & Post Bellamy tells these and other tales with his usual flamboyant yet sympathetic panache, once again creating a volume that just isn't easy to put down, especially for local history or crime buffs. -- Book Reviewer Maple Heights Press Has more than its fair share of violence, sex, debauchery and reversals of fortune . . . But what emerges between the lines are stories of human suffering, stories of class struggle, stories that speak as much to the criminal mind as to the crime itself . . . And Bellamy clearly relishes his criminals. Sometimes he pokes fun. Sometimes he wonders at the humanity of it all. But always he tells his tales with sympathy, compassion and a good old-fashioned, if not antiquated, flair for storytelling.--Jarrod Zickefoose Sun Press (04/08/2004) As with all the books in his Cleveland crime series, Bellamy writes with razor-edged wit and his own particular brand of charm.--Sandra Fahning Medina County Gazette (06/26/2004) Take the titles of his past books and you get the idea. The Maniac in the Bushes, They Died Crawling and Corpse in the Cellar and Killer in the Attic probably reside in half the residential book cases on northern Ohio. Certainly in mine. They are a guilty pleasure if your mind works that way . . . The best writer and historian to come out of Cleveland since George Condon, whose Best Kept Secret is a marvelous book on the city's story.--Ron Simon News-Journal (03/31/2004) Interesting how murder and mayhem can prod one's historical curiosity. Bellamy even makes it fun by including many familiar places--no matter where you're driving, you'll take the occasional detour to check out some of the book's ghoulish crime scenes.--Thomas Mulloy Call & Post (12/09/2004) Bellamy tells these and other tales with his usual flamboyant yet sympathetic panache, once again creating a volume that just isn't easy to put down, especially for local history or crime buffs.--S.T . S.T Maple Heights Press (12/16/2004) To look at John Stark Bellamy, you wouldn't think this that friendly-faced guy in a sportcoat and tie was the keeper of the Cleveland Crypt, as author of five volumes of what he likes to call Cleveland dismalia. But then, many a dark, roiling inner life is concealed behind a mild fa�ade.--Mark Satola Free Times (04/07/2004) Bellamy tells these and other tales with his usual flamboyant yet sympathetic panache, once again creating a volume that just isn't easy to put down, especially for local history or crime buffs. -- Book Reviewer Maple Heights Press And Bellamy clearly relishes his criminals. Sometimes he pokes fun. Sometimes he wonders at the humanity of it all. But always he tells his tales with sympathy, compassion and a good old-fashoned, if not antiquated, flair for storytelling. -- Book Reviewer Sun Newspapers Interesting how murder and mayhem can prod one's historical curiosity. Bellamy even makes it fun by including many familiar places--no matter where you're driving, you'll take the occasional detour to check out some of the book's ghoulish crime scenes. -- Book Reviewer Call & Post Bellamy tells these and other tales with his usual flamboyant yet sympathetic panache, once again creating a volume that just isn't easy to put down, especially for local history or crime buffs. -- Book Reviewer Maple Heights Press Has more than its fair share of violence, sex, debauchery and reversals of fortune . . . But what emerges between the lines are stories of human suffering, stories of class struggle, stories that speak as much to the criminal mind as to the crime itself . . . And Bellamy clearly relishes his criminals. Sometimes he pokes fun. Sometimes he wonders at the humanity of it all. But always he tells his tales with sympathy, compassion and a good old-fashioned, if not antiquated, flair for storytelling.--Jarrod Zickefoose Sun Press (04/08/2004) As with all the books in his Cleveland crime series, Bellamy writes with razor-edged wit and his own particular brand of charm.--Sandra Fahning Medina County Gazette (06/26/2004) To look at John Stark Bellamy, you wouldn't think this that friendly-faced guy in a sportcoat and tie was the keeper of the Cleveland Crypt, as author of five volumes of what he likes to call Cleveland dismalia. But then, many a dark, roiling inner life is concealed behind a mild facade.--Mark Satola Free Times (04/07/2004) Take the titles of his past books and you get the idea. The Maniac in the Bushes, They Died Crawling and Corpse in the Cellar and Killer in the Attic probably reside in half the residential book cases on northern Ohio. Certainly in mine. They are a guilty pleasure if your mind works that way . . . The best writer and historian to come out of Cleveland since George Condon, whose Best Kept Secret is a marvelous book on the city's story.--Ron Simon News-Journal (03/31/2004) Interesting how murder and mayhem can prod one's historical curiosity. Bellamy even makes it fun by including many familiar places--no matter where you're driving, you'll take the occasional detour to check out some of the book's ghoulish crime scenes.--Thomas Mulloy Call & Post (12/09/2004) Bellamy tells these and other tales with his usual flamboyant yet sympathetic panache, once again creating a volume that just isn't easy to put down, especially for local history or crime buffs.--S.T . S.T Maple Heights Press (12/16/2004) Author InformationJohn Stark Bellamy II is the author of six books and two anthologies about Cleveland crime and disaster. The former history specialist for the Cuyahoga County Public Library, he comes by his taste for the sensational honestly, having grown up reading stories about Cleveland crime and disaster written by his grandfather, Paul, who was editor of the Plain Dealer, and his father, Peter, who wrote for the Cleveland News and the Plain Dealer. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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