Cold Storage
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
On June 3, 1991, an abandoned car was found on a busy stretch of highway near Newport Beach, California. Its owner, Denise Huber, seemed to have vanished off the face of the earth.
For three years, her disappearance remained a mystery, inspiring one of the most intensive missing-persons searches in history. All to no avail. Because the only man who knew what happened to Denise wasn't talking. He wasn't through with her yet.
On July 3, 1994, in an affluent suburb of Prescott, Arizona, a padlocked truck parked in the driveway of 37-year-old John Famalaro provoked suspicion. When authorities finally pried open its doors, they found the nude, handcuffed corpse of Denise Huber stuffed into a freezer--preserved forever in the throes of death.
Inside Famalaro's home were Denise's personal belongings along with neatly arranged "trophies" of other female prey. But it was the revelations at Famalaro's trial that would truly stagger the imagination, laying bare the terrifying details of Denise's final hours, and exposing the dark past of a merciless killer consumed by perversity and unfathomable evil.
Customer Reviews
Excellent story but poor editing makes reading jarring
The incredible emotional content and well-researched and written story is marred by poor editing. Wrong words, missing words and other errors took me out of the reading flow at times. If you write another book, please reach out and I’ll copy edit for you! Otherwise, excellent story!
Cold Storage
A bit more history of some people than needed but the book was well written. What a ghastly story. I believe in capital punishment but even that is too good for him.
Both fascinating and sad
This book delved into the background of the killer, exposing the very peculiar family dynamic that makes you wonder how any of the children in that family could ever become “normal” adults. The writing was clear and fair to all the people involved, and truly made you feel that you knew each one of them. My one complaint was in the editing, with too many punctuation marks tossed in seemingly in error, misspellings and omitted or garbled words that required re-reading sections to translate sections into what the author really wrote. (Thus the subtracted “star.”)