Globe Pequot / Prometheus
Pages: 340
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-63388-195-2 • Paperback • July 2016 • $19.00 • (£14.99)
978-1-63388-196-9 • eBook • July 2016 • $18.00 • (£13.99)
1900s—Railroad millionaire Harry K. Thaw kills architect Stanford White in 1906. The trial focuses on whether Thaw was driven insane by White's seduction of Thaw's glamorous young wife, Evelyn Nesbit.
1910s—In Atlanta, Georgia, factory superintendent Leo Frank--a Jew from New York--is falsely accused of thirteen-year-old Mary Phagan's murder and eventually lynched by a rabidly anti-Semitic mob.
1920s—Movie star "Fatty" Arbuckle is tried three times for the death of actress Virginia Rappe during a wild party hosted by Arbuckle in a San Francisco hotel. Though finally acquitted, his career is ruined by the negative publicity.
1930s—Who kidnapped and killed the baby of world-famous aviator Charles Lindbergh and his wife? Though petty criminal Bruno Hauptmann was convicted, questions linger to this day about the identity of the real culprit.
1940s—The murder of New York socialite Patricia Burton Lonergan generates an incredible media frenzy, with more reporters present on the first day of the trial than are assigned to cover the allied invasion of Italy.
1950s—Sam Sheppard, a respected physician in Bay Village, Ohio, is accused of the murder of his wife, sparking intense media coverage and eventually the TV series The Fugitive.
1960s—The heinous murder of student nurses by drifter Richard Speck and the subsequent manhunt, arrest, and trial shocks the nation and receives blanket media coverage.
1970s—Charles Manson's murder of pregnant Hollywood starlet Sharon Tate and friends evokes both horror and fascination, stoked by unprecedented television coverage.
1980s—The murder of the Scarsdale Diet guru, Dr. Herman Tarnower, by an elite prep-school headmistress, Mrs. Jean Harris, triggers a storm of press coverage revealing a vicious love triangle.
1990s—The trial of football star and celebrity O.J. Simpson for the murder of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman creates a media circus like no other, amplified by the new prevalence of 24-hour cable news.
2000s—The trial of Casey Anthony for the 2008 murder of her missing two-year-old demonstrates, among other things, the power of new online media to create a vast Internet echo chamber.
""Riveting accounts of the ten most-fascinating trials of the twentieth century will keep pages turning compulsively.” —JOSEPH WAMBAUGH, bestselling author of The Onion Field“For trial junkies—and who isn't?—these riveting accounts of ten ‘trials of the century,' one from each decade, are a must-read. The stories tell us as much about the history of each decade as they do about the trials themselves.” —ALAN DERSHOWITZ, author of Taking the Stand: My Life in the Law “In Trials of the Century, authors Mark J. Phillips and Aryn Z. Phillips (father/daughter) unite their obvious skills as attorney and sociologist respectively as they present eleven of the nation's most-infamous criminal trials. Each of these trials in its own day and time was labeled by the press as ‘the trial of the century.' The individual case studies are fascinating, but of greater value is how the authors reveal the hyperbolic role the press played in influencing the verdict in each of these cases, the media often attempting to replace the actual seated jurors by making sensational demands for ‘front-page justice.' An informative and mesmerizing read. I highly recommend it.”—Steve Hodel, New York Times–bestselling true-crime author of Black Dahlia Avenger“A fascinating look at twentieth-century America through ten murder trials that feature a colorful cast from a full cross section of society, from heiresses and celebrities to drifters, dropouts, and a bestselling author. Mark J. Phillips and Aryn Z. Phillips excel in putting these crimes in their cultural and social contexts, using them as a storm gauge for how America, its people, and the public's obsessions have changed across the decades.”—Ross King, author of the New York Times–bestseller Brunelleschi's Dome“A fascinating, quick read.... I would definitely recommend Trials of the Century to anyone who is interested in high-profile crimes of the last century. It is also a thoughtful book that gives us insight into both the people involved in the cases and the workings of our criminal justice system. I thoroughly enjoyed it.”—Laurie Levenson, professor of law, Loyola Law School“An engrossing history of some of the most-notorious murder trials of the twentieth century. Expertly researched and vividly recounted, Trials of the Century provides insight into society's fascination with not only ten infamous violent crimes but also the sensationalized criminal trials that followed.”—Trevor W. Morrison, dean, New York University School of Law
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