“Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore we are saved by love” This quote from Reinhold Niebuhr tells of a human incapability to accomplish a deed of any sort without the assistance of love. In The Catcher in the Rye; Salinger, J.D. The Catcher in the Rye. New York: Little Brown and Company, 1991 and Jane…
The book “Cross Bones” is about a forensic anthropologist, Dr. Temperance Brennan. She is an expert at examining decomposed corpses. She is called to consult a murder because an Orthodox Jewish man was found shot in Montreal. She is a strong empowered woman. She sees that it is her job to restore the identity of the deceased. The Orthodox Jewish man’s body was found dismembered in the cupboard surrounded by cats. Unannounced, a stranger sneaks in and slips Temperance a photograph. The photo was of a skeleton at an archaeological site and assures her that this is the key to the victim’s death. This leads her to Israel, to Masada and Jerusalem, and right to the beginnings of the Christian era. This international mystery could rewrite 2000 years…
On the morning of August 7, 1967, a 15-year-old schoolgirl, Linda Peacock, was found murdered in a cemetery in Biggar, near Edinburgh, Scotland. She had been struck with a blunt object and strangled with a rope. Her clothes were disturbed but she had not been raped. However, there was clear evidence of sexual motive for her attack as there was a bite mark on her right breast, which was an oval shape bruise that showed certain irregularities of the dentition, including pitting of the canine biting edges.…
This book includes several investigations of America’s most shocking crimes, in which Emily Craig takes you behind the scenes of real-life cases. Dr. Emily Craig, is a forensic anthropologist for the state of Kentucky Medical Examiner’s Office. She was the author of this spectacular book. Emily’s job was to examine bones, fragments of extremities, and burned human remains, to help determine how people died, who they were, and sometimes even what they looked like (which is what they often had to do). Emily is one of the best forensic anthropologists in the country, and has helped identify many murder victims and solve hundreds of cold cases. In the book Emily tells her stories about her spontaneous career, which has ranged from murder victims…
I was fourteen when I was murdered on December 6, 1973," Susie Salmon tells us in the second sentence of The Lovely Bones. She shows us who did it—a neighbor everyone thinks is weird—and describes the horrible scene, a brutal assault and dismemberment in an underground hideout in a bleak winter cornfield. Sebold's triumph is in making Susie's voice so immediately compelling that we don't want to let her go, even after she's dead. We want to know what happens next. So does Susie.…
We all have peculiar family stories that have been estranged from familiarity, often for a good reason, but the story of Cam Lyman is one that surpasses all in utter obscurity. Although the tale only brushes my family indirectly, it is so fascinating, so shocking, that it has never been forgotten. Lyman was an informal man of many traits: a millionaire, dog breeder, and unsanctioned transvestite. She was already very unusual on her own, but the most unusual thing is her gruesome murder that occurred on my family’s farm, which is still a mystery unresolved. Although it is quite remarkable, the case has been forgotten by society, like many enigmas, and I want to put Cam’s story back out: his/her background, the disappearance, and the murder.…
Twenty-nine years ago on February 23, 23 year old Jaye Potter Mintz was found brutally murdered in her not stark but blood-splattered bedroom by her mother, Lorene Potter. Jaye Potters throat had been slit, her hands tied behind her back, a pillow had covered her face, and she had been raped by her murderer. Potter's son was found crying in a corner holding on for dear life apprehensively as he saw his mother murdered right before his eyes. Earlier that week Potter had put an ad in a newspaper about a waterbed that she was selling, it was believed at the time that the murderer was a possible buyer for the bed and also knew Potter personally.…
Victoria Pasquantonio in “Gender Gap in Math Starts in Kindergarten, Study Says” uses different sources to address the gender gap in the STEM fields. Said sources altogether conclude that women do not pursue STEM because their teachers underrated their abilities at STEM throughout school, and that the teachers underrated women because they lived in a culture that says that STEM is not meant for women. Although Pasquantonio’s article effectively reveals a bias against women in STEM, I feel that her article fails to connect this bias to why women choose to not pursue STEM. Likewise, Pasquantonio does not explain why or how teachers’ bias against women caused a gender gap in STEM.…
“I’m didn’t kill the boy! I see numbers on the forehead of all people. When he was walking home, I was with my friend Stubby, and we were studying for the science test. I am telling you the truth to you since I got a 98 on that test,” Maddie argued during a suspenseful interview. However, despite Maddie Fynn’s rationale on her innocence, many of her teachers and her principal, Mr. Harris, directly and indirectly, treat Maddie as a murderer. Because of the questionable disappearance of Tevon Tibbolt, Maddie Fynn’s life turned into an experience of unnecessary confusion and suspense. Although conclusive evidence to support the idea the Maddie Fynn committed the crime is limited, Agents Faraday and Wallace will continue to investigate the girl for further…
Never is a thirteen year old girl accused of murder and found guilty. But Charlotte Doyle was just that. In the book, The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle written by Avi, you will visit the Seahawk (a cargo ship that belongs to her father’s company) along with Charlotte Doyle the “social snob” in the year 1832, on a Trans Atlantic journey .This is a story of Charlotte’s transformation as she figures out who she truly is.…
This book mainly focus’s on the murder that took place in the Ida B. Wells. Five year old, Eric Morse was murdered after he refused to steal candy from a store. Two boys ages 10 and 11 took the five year old and dangled him from the 14th story window. Eric’s brother Daniel grabbed him and pulled Eric back inside. The older boys did it again and this…
When reading A Murder in Virginia many questions arise about why this book is important and even why the story about Lucy Pollard death mattered in 1895 let alone why it matters to us now in 2015. Suzanne Lebsock doesn't come right out and tell you the answers to these questions, rather she leaves subtle hints throughout the book and tells you why she thinks it is important to learn about in the last chapter of the book. I think she does it this way so you can formulate your own ideas and your own reasons on why the Lucy Pollard case is an influential piece of history.…
The Police Department of Alamance County had never seen a victim so composed, so determined and so sure. Just a few hours after her horrifying ordeal, after the emotionless doctor swabbed her vagina for semen samples at the hospital, Jennifer sat down at the police station with Detective Mike Gauldin. "The first comment I remember her making was that, “I'm going to get this guy that did this to me.” She said, “I took the time to look at him. I will be able to identify him if I'm given an opportunity," Gauldin remembered her saying (Hansen, 2001). She began combing through photos, trying to help come up with a composite of her rapist.…
Law enforcement in Pennsylvania has put up a search for a middle-aged man suspected of the murder of a 14-year old girl and the possibility of several others. The young victim’s elbow was found by a neighboring dog as was her hat covered in saliva, which is thought to have been used as a gag. The past murders do not seem to be consistent to one age group and no other patterns have been found. The oldest known victim, Sophie Cichetti, was age 49 at death. She was murdered in her home, however she was left fully intact on a nearby creek side. The murderer is very unpredictable, but organized. He seems to move from place to place after his murders and completely conceals the evidence, which is why he has been hard to catch. Police are hopeful in their current approach now that some connections are being uncovered.…
Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre tells the story of Jane’s growth and development as she searches for a meaningful existence in society. Author Faith McKay said, “No matter what your family happens to be like…it affects who you are. It matters.” Jane is an orphan, forced to battle a cruel guardian, a patriarchal society, and a rigid social order. (Anderson, “Identity and Independence in Jane Eyre”) Jane has concrete beliefs in what women deserve, as well as obtainable goals for how she imagines her place in society as a woman (Lewkowicz, “The Experience of Womanhood in Jane Eyre”) and with self-growth, Jane Eyre was able to define herself as well as equip herself with wisdom and…