I see some discussion of the book The Man From The Train on another thread so I thought I’d start one here.
This is a small excerpt from my review, published in Ripperologist Magazine several years ago.
“In looking at the Villisca case and finding other, nearly identical murders in the same geographical region, all linked by train tracks, a pattern began to emerge to the authors. They noticed the same signature and modus operandi, concepts unknown to the police in the early years of the 20th century, being repeated time and time again.
Some, but not all, of the signature and M.O. that the authors use to connect these dozens of crimes are:
The killer targeted homes within a short walk from the train tracks just outside of small towns where there was no local police force.
He waited until the early morning hours just after midnight to strike, often hiding in a barn.
The families he picked to kill more time than not had a prepubescent female as one of its members.
He would borrow an ax either from the house itself or from a neighboring house and leave the ax behind after washing it of blood. The ax was often left next to the young girl victim.
He would only use the blunt end of the ax, never the sharp end.
He would pull the curtains or use other material to cover the windows and lock all of the doors, or jamb them shut, prior to leaving.
He would find an oil lamp, remove its chimney, and place it in some conspicuous place inside the crime scene (a calling card that I found very interesting).
He would cover up the heads of all of his victims.
He would murder everyone while they slept and leave them in their beds, except the young girl, whom he would often move and leave posed.
He would never commit robbery.
He would leave the house through a back window, return to the train track (in some cases bloodhounds traced his movement back to the train) and strike in another town after a routine ‘cooling-off’ period and like-distance away from his prior attack.
The shear repetition of the above factors, in case after case,does drill into the reader a sense that these authors are on to something.”
The Man From the Train: The Solving of a Century Old Serial Killing Mystery
Bill James and Rachel McCarthy James
Simon & Schuster 2017
ISBN-10: 1476796254
ISBN-13: 978-1476796253
Hardback: 480 pages
JM
This is a small excerpt from my review, published in Ripperologist Magazine several years ago.
“In looking at the Villisca case and finding other, nearly identical murders in the same geographical region, all linked by train tracks, a pattern began to emerge to the authors. They noticed the same signature and modus operandi, concepts unknown to the police in the early years of the 20th century, being repeated time and time again.
Some, but not all, of the signature and M.O. that the authors use to connect these dozens of crimes are:
The killer targeted homes within a short walk from the train tracks just outside of small towns where there was no local police force.
He waited until the early morning hours just after midnight to strike, often hiding in a barn.
The families he picked to kill more time than not had a prepubescent female as one of its members.
He would borrow an ax either from the house itself or from a neighboring house and leave the ax behind after washing it of blood. The ax was often left next to the young girl victim.
He would only use the blunt end of the ax, never the sharp end.
He would pull the curtains or use other material to cover the windows and lock all of the doors, or jamb them shut, prior to leaving.
He would find an oil lamp, remove its chimney, and place it in some conspicuous place inside the crime scene (a calling card that I found very interesting).
He would cover up the heads of all of his victims.
He would murder everyone while they slept and leave them in their beds, except the young girl, whom he would often move and leave posed.
He would never commit robbery.
He would leave the house through a back window, return to the train track (in some cases bloodhounds traced his movement back to the train) and strike in another town after a routine ‘cooling-off’ period and like-distance away from his prior attack.
The shear repetition of the above factors, in case after case,does drill into the reader a sense that these authors are on to something.”
The Man From the Train: The Solving of a Century Old Serial Killing Mystery
Bill James and Rachel McCarthy James
Simon & Schuster 2017
ISBN-10: 1476796254
ISBN-13: 978-1476796253
Hardback: 480 pages
JM
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