THE AX MURDERS OF SAXTOWN NOW AVAILABLE IN KINDLE STORE
I know. Nothing says "Merry Christmas" like a book about an ax murder.
But, after ten years of research and writing, my book on the Stelzriede family murders of 1874 is ready for public consumption. Amazon is making The Ax Murders of Saxtown available for early download (December 23) through its Kindle store and app.
The book traces the Germananic roots of Southern Illinois near St. Louis, Missouri. It shows how the frenzy around the crime and the lust for reward money among private detectives (during a brutal economic depression) enabled the five-person killing to go unsolved.
The killings turned an entire farming community against itself. Neighbors accused each other of committing the crime. Some battled each other in court through defamation lawsuits.
One persistent sleuth, years after the crime, was said to have hid underneath the crawlspace of a dying suspect's bedroom—hoping to overhear a deathbed confession. But that is just only part of the legends and lore of the Saxtown case, a crime that was hurled onto the front pages of newspapers across the nation, but then quickly forgotten.
I'll be writing more about the project (and some other things) in this space.
If you are interested in buying the book, I'd prefer for everyone to wait for the full release, which includes the hardcover product, on January 14. But if you can't wait...you can buy it here. (If you've already pre-ordered the print version from Amazon, you can get the Kindle version for just $2.99.)
But, after ten years of research and writing, my book on the Stelzriede family murders of 1874 is ready for public consumption. Amazon is making The Ax Murders of Saxtown available for early download (December 23) through its Kindle store and app.
The book traces the Germananic roots of Southern Illinois near St. Louis, Missouri. It shows how the frenzy around the crime and the lust for reward money among private detectives (during a brutal economic depression) enabled the five-person killing to go unsolved.
The killings turned an entire farming community against itself. Neighbors accused each other of committing the crime. Some battled each other in court through defamation lawsuits.
One persistent sleuth, years after the crime, was said to have hid underneath the crawlspace of a dying suspect's bedroom—hoping to overhear a deathbed confession. But that is just only part of the legends and lore of the Saxtown case, a crime that was hurled onto the front pages of newspapers across the nation, but then quickly forgotten.
I'll be writing more about the project (and some other things) in this space.
If you are interested in buying the book, I'd prefer for everyone to wait for the full release, which includes the hardcover product, on January 14. But if you can't wait...you can buy it here. (If you've already pre-ordered the print version from Amazon, you can get the Kindle version for just $2.99.)
Published on December 28, 2013 10:32
•
Tags:
kindle, mystery, saxtown, true-crime
No comments have been added yet.