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Casey Sherman

    19 de enero de 1969

    Casey Sherman es un aclamado autor cuyas obras a menudo profundizan en narrativas apasionantes extraídas de eventos de la vida real. Su escritura se distingue por su capacidad para sumergir a los lectores en el corazón de sucesos dramáticos, mientras explora la resiliencia humana frente a la adversidad. Sherman combina magistralmente una meticulosa investigación con una narrativa cautivadora, creando relatos que resuenan tanto en el cine como en la literatura. Su habilidad para desvelar la esencia del espíritu humano bajo extrema presión lo convierte en un cronista único de los tiempos actuales.

    Casey Sherman
    Helltown
    The Last Days of John Lennon
    Hunting Whitey: The Inside Story of the Capture & Killing of America's Most Wanted Crime Boss
    • The Last Days of John Lennon

      • 448 páginas
      • 16 horas de lectura

      John Lennon was one of the world's most influential people. Mark David Chapman was one of the most invisible. By the end of 1980, the Beatles had been broken up for a decade - a decade John Lennon had spent in search of his true identity: singer, songwriter, activist, burn out. But now, he declared, "it's the perfect time to be coming back". Except that Lennon was a marked man. As early as the Beatles' controversial 1966 American tour, during which the band had feared for their safety, Lennon had complained, "You might as well put a target on me". The Nixon administration did just that, putting Lennon under FBI surveillance. If only the agents hadn't been so intently focussed on the star himself, they might have detected Mark David Chapman's powerful, ever-growing obsession with the man he'd grown up idolising. Chapman, himself a tragic nowhere man, ultimately achieved the notoriety he craved by making the target on Lennon very real - and single-handedly wounding the spirit of a generation.

      The Last Days of John Lennon
      4,0
    • "In the winter of 1969, the bodies of four young women were discovered in a cemetery near the tip of Cape Cod. In a place once known as Helltown, the victims had been shot, stabbed, dismembered, and mutilated. As investigators would soon learn, the perpetrator was a young, handsome, serial killer named Tony Costa. A bizarre former taxidermist with a split personality and penchant for violence, Costa ultimately mobilized friends in the hippie community for support and retribution and captivated literary icons and rivals Kurt Vonnegut and Norman Mailer. Costa embarked on a daring cat-and-mouse game with investigators, who-as the body count kept growing-were desperate to put an end to the killing season on Cape Cod"--

      Helltown
      3,4