And, it's one story from the past that haunts so many of the men in this book, the story of a boy found in a box in Philadelphia in 1957. Fleisher and so many of the Philadelphia police officers remember that boy, and work on the case for years. One passage about the reburial of that boy in 1998, is haunting itself, "The young policemen of the winter of 1957 were disguised now as old men." Capuzzo's skillful use of language allows the nonfiction book to be as riveting as fiction.
The Murder Room isn't a story of one crime, or just those three men, though. It's a story of an innocent country in 1957, one that woke up to find serial killers in its midst in the '60s and '70s, killers that police forces were ill-equipped to find. But, the Vidocq Society was able to bring together the finest minds of law enforcement and criminology to investigate unsolved cases that were at least two years old. In the long run, their investigations only dealt with a tiny number of cases in the country since, according to Capuzzo,"As many as one in three murders went unsolved," but they continued to search for the truth.
Admittedly, there are times Capuzzo gets a little repetitive, particularly when dealing with the biographies of his three lead investigators. Even so, The Murder Room is a gripping story of cold case investigation, all the more powerful because it is true. And, fiction itself couldn't create three characters as different, and as intriguing, as Walter, Bender, and Fleisher. Anyone fascinated by cold cases, and the men who investigate them, will want to pick up Michael Capuzzo's The Murder Room.
Michael Capuzzo's website is http://www.michaelcapuzzo.com/
The Murder Room: The Heirs of Sherlock Holmes Gather to Solve the World's Most Perplexing cold Cases by Michael Capuzzo. Penguin Group (USA), ©2010. ISBN 9781592401420 (hardcover), 448p.
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