(I don't own the actual Kindle gadget, so I don't know how much it may vary from the iPhone's version.)
1. The application is free to download! (Though the actual books cost money - how dare they?)
2. I can read at night in bed without turning on the lights and consequently disturbing The Doomed.
3. You can download free samples of any book Amazon has available electronically. (GREAT for deciding if you really want to spend $9 on a novel you can't place on your bookshelf.)
4. You can buy books right from your phone (either through the Amazon application or just using your web browser) and they zoom over to your phone in less than a minute. (Although this is sort of awful for my tendency towards impulse-purchasing - yet another reason to love the free samples!)
5. Not all, but a lot of the books still include any pictures that come with the actual physical books. (I read a lot of biographies and those usually have a few pages reserved in the center for relevant photos - I like that.)
6. You can highlight text, tab pages, write notes, and look up the definition of words - right on the same page you are reading.
7. Books vary in prices, from free - about $15.00, so everyone can find something affordable.
8. So handy to read anytime you want. (Who doesn't always have their phone handy on them anyway?)
(Disclosure: I am not associated with Amazon, Apple, or the Kindle device in anyway and have not received any compensation for the above review. I'm just a fan of my gadgets. :) )
Reading Compulsion
Book reviews and tidbits from a serious bookworm
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Friday, August 27, 2010
Black Dahlia Avenger - Steve Hodel
If you are interested in U.S. murder history, chances are you've heard of the Black Dahlia. The Black Dahlia was Elizabeth Short, a pretty, young girl trying to make her way in 1940's Los Angeles. She was found brutally murdered on January 15, 1947 and it's the incredibly gruesome manner in which she was found combined with her nickname that have made her one of Los Angeles' most notorious unsolved murders. Black Dahlia Avenger covers the investigation Steve Hodel, a former LAPD officer and homicide detective supervisor with over 20 years experience, embarks on to discover that his own father, Dr. George Hodel, was responsible for Elizabeth Short's slaying and possibly even responsible for the murders of other young women in the same era.
I found Hodel's book to be a very interesting read with well-detailed and thorough research that presented quite compelling evidence that his father could in fact be Elizabeth Short's murderer. My big issue with the book was the reason Hodel decided to invesitgate the matter to begin with. His father passed away in May of 1999 and it was at that time that Hodel received a small photo album his father had kept of those nearest and dearest. While Hodel recognized many photos, there were a few of women he didn't know at all. Two pictures, in particular, stood out to him. He decided they seemed to resemble Elizabeth Short and after doing a brief internet search, concluded "No question. It was she."
It's this statement of his, right at the beginning of the book, that already led me to take the rest of his investigation with a grain of salt. I freely admit that I'm no investigator or authorian, but I saw those same pictures and I've seen many others of Elizabeth Short as well. I don't think the photos are of her at all. As I stated before, I think he makes a very compelling case, backed up with newspaper articles from the timeframe and official police and court documents where he could obtain them, not to mention expert handwriting analysis and interviews with those who knew both his father and details of the original LAPD investigation. I don't discount nor discredit his abilities as a detective. But. He spends a little too much time, for me, simply concluding things. This and this happened so it must mean this and this. His father was a well-respected doctor, a wealthy man living in a Lloyd Wright-designed home in Los Feliz, with a history of womanizing and abuse, both of women and substances. But that doesn't mean he was the ONLY one. It's LA. Even in the 1940s, LA was full of those. He unquestionably proved that his father was a despicable man, but that doesn't necessarily mean he was a murderer, let alone a serial killer.
The Black Dahlia Avenger is not the first book I've read claiming to have solved the murder and I'm sure it won't be the last, but of the few I've read, despite my remaining reservations, this has certainly provided the most conclusive proof. The truth is, the murder is most likely impossible to solve at this point. Too much time has passed, too much corruption within the LAPD of that era causing possible tampering with both evidence and the investigation as a whole, and most of those involved with the murder in any way have by now passed away.
I am curious to read his follow-up book wherein he apparently claims that not only was his father responsible for the Dahlia murder, but perhaps even more, including the Zodiac killings! (Seriously?)
Bookworm Rating: ****
Recently Acquired
I went to a couple thrift stores (favorite spot for good, cheap books!) a few months ago and $5 later walked out with the following:
- M*A*S*H by Richard Hooker
- BUtterfield 8 by John O'Hara
- Born to Be Hurt: The Untold Story of Imitation of Life by Sam Staggs
- Dr. Suess and Mr. Geisel: A Biography by Judith and Neil Morgan
- Dashiell Hammett by Diane Johnson
- No Safe Place by Richard North Patterson
Added to the reading list!
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