True Crime Storytime
84 Unforgettable & Twisted True Crime Cases Throughout History That Haunted People for Decades (Decades of True Crime Stories, Book 1)
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Narrated by:
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Michael Goodrick
About this listen
Buckle up, true crime junkies! Forget Grandma's mystery collection—this is something better!
Something that actually happened.
Prepare to dive into 84 unforgettable true crime stories that zip through seven decades of murder and mayhem.
From the roaring '20s to the gritty '90s, this is your ticket to a crime tour that’s more thrilling than a haunted roller coaster.
Some of these cases might ring a bell, while others will be fresh horrors you’ve never encountered. And some mysteries are still as cold as the killer's heart.
This collection is like a time machine that stops at every dark alley of history's most horrific crimes.
You'll meet two types of villains. There are the ones who could be your next-door neighbors, hiding their sinister deeds behind acts of normalcy. And then there are the ones who are unapologetically monstrous—what you see is definitely what you get.
Seven decades of crime and still, the debate rages on—are killers born, or are they made? As you explore the depths of human nature across these stories, see where you land on this eternal question.
Here’s just a teaser of the spine-chilling adventures that await inside:
The Nebraska Blood Trail—A teen fugitive and his girlfriend embark on a murder spree across Nebraska, brutally killing entire families, and sparking one of the most infamous manhunts of the 1950s.
The Townhouse Massacre—In a quiet Chicago neighborhood, a man invades a townhouse and methodically tortures and slaughters eight nursing students in a single, horrifying night.
The Gainesville Slasher—In a chilling sequence of days, five college students in Gainesville find themselves the targets of a deranged killer who not only murders them but grotesquely poses their bodies afterwards.
©2024 Sea Vision Publishing, LLC (P)2024 Sea Vision Publishing, LLCWhat listeners say about True Crime Storytime
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- critical friend
- 21-06-24
Eclectic collection of true crime stories 1920s'on
There is a repeated format of a scene setting introduction, 12 cases per decade and a conclusion starting in 1920's and finishing in 1980's, so seven parts. I could discern no logic to the order of presentation and, at times, it deviated from the introduction's contentions. An example is a decade described as being filled with serial killers has a single victim crime to begin. There is an overlap in the tone of the introductions and conclusions with the former variously promising to keep you up all night, understanding motives for murder or getting inside the mind of a psychopath. My rating is partly based upon it doing none of these things. It is written as narrative non-fiction to try and make it more dramatic, but this detracts from credibility and accuracy of reporting. An example is that more than once you are told an innocent person is the last one to see the victim alive, Any amateur detective or police procedural afficionado will know that the killer is the last person to see the victim alive, in most instances. There are also accounts giving details without saying how this colour and depth to the story is known. This is particularly perplexing in the accounts where the perpetrator is unknown - and there seemed to be a lot of these. I suspect all the unkown solution cases were intended to create tension in that the killer could still be at large.It backfires somewhat when the cases start over 100 years ago.
The accounts come from three continents and whilst this provides some balance to the USA bias, it also exposes the lack of research or understanding of some of these cases. The American narrator also has trouble with non-US words and phrases, mangling pronunciations. Another example of credibility being reduced by the narrative style is telling you English witnesses are using US English words like sidewalk instead of pavement. The narrator also seemed to have made some mistakes in saying forties when on the section about the fifties and using RCMP and RMCP when referring to Canadian mounties. The narration must have been a herculean task and I have given credit for this as well as trying to inject some enthusiasm and emotion into the telling.
I received a free advance review copy and am leaving this review volintarily.
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