The Midnight Assassin The Midnight Assassin

The Midnight Assassin

Panic, Scandal, and the Hunt for America's First Serial Killer

    • 4.2 • 95 Ratings
    • $12.99

Publisher Description

The New York Times Bestseller
Winner of the Texas Institute of Letters's Carr P. Collins Award
One of Book Riot's Best Books of the Year

In nineteenth-century Austin, Texas, a ruthless murderer terrorized the city in what would soon become a story more shocking than any fiction.

In the late 1800s, just as Austin was on the cusp of emerging from an isolated western outpost into a truly cosmopolitan metropolis, a series of brutal murders rocked the burgeoning city and shook it to its core. At the time, the concept of a serial killer was unknown and unimaginable, but the murders continued, the killer became more brazen, and the citizens’ panic reached a fever pitch.

For more than a decade, Texas Monthly journalist Skip Hollandsworth has researched this gripping tale of murder and madness that plays out like a well-crafted whodunit. With vivid historical detail and novelistic flair, Hollandsworth's The Midnight Assassin: The Hunt for America's First Serial Killer brings this terrifying saga to life.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2016
April 5
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
512
Pages
PUBLISHER
Henry Holt and Co.
SELLER
Macmillan
SIZE
6.4
MB

Customer Reviews

Silentdriver78 ,

A good satisfying read

Skip does a terrific job of using history to set the tone and provide vivid context around each murder. This is of course accomplished through some tireless research I'm sure he would admit was on the verge of obsession. I am not an avid reader but I'm sure many writers employ the technique of toggling back and forth between history lesson and subject matter. Skip manages this without ever becoming boring. It is peculiar how the occurrences were so unspeakably horrible that a much more Puritan society decided it was best to erase it from history altogether.

bikmr ,

Fantastic Author, Thrilling Story

Skip Hollandsworth is my favorite "Texas Monthly" contributor - and I think this book clearly shows that's for good reason. In my experience, the inexplicable nature of still-unresolved mysteries tends to inhibit the sort of "gravitational pull" of narratives spun around them; however, Hollandsworth has plied his considerable talents in having written what is, ultimately, an engrossing, affecting, page-turner of a book about a century-old killer to whose identity few clues have ever been collected and will almost certainly never be known. This is not to say that you won't be disappointed at the end of this thrilling story; rather, that this disappointment will almost certainly stem from the realization that you've run out of pages to read, not from the lack of a tidy and well-supported solution.

BrianM8614 ,

Don't Compare This To Larsenn

I don't usually not finish a book, but this was not written very well. Lots of detail (too much?) without ever fleshing out the characters. The style is kind of stiff. I really wanted this to be like "Devil In The White City", but it wasn't remotely close. Lots of facts, not much feeling.

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