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Thursday, June 29, 2023

Book Review: True Crime Addict by James Renner

True Crime Addict: How I Lost Myself in the Mysterious Disappearance of Maura Murray

Intimate and surprising, this memoir disguised within a true crime book hooked me from page one and never let me go. I literally had to tell myself to put it down and go to sleep a few nights ago. It's that engrossing. The expression "truth is stranger than fiction" came to mind quite often as I read this strange, twisting, slightly paranormal story of missing and murdered women and girls and the people who devote themselves to finding them and bringing their kidnappers and killers to justice.

I borrowed this book from the Indianapolis Public Library and was not obligated in any way to review it. This review represents my own honest opinion. 

James Renner's new release is Little, Crazy Children: A True Crime Tragedy of Lost Innocence, released June 27, 2023. This is an affiliate link:

Thursday, June 22, 2023

June 22, 1918: The Hammond Circus Train Crash

Near Hammond, Indiana, a 26-car train bearing workers and performers from the Hagenbeck–Wallace Circus crashes when the engineer falls asleep at the wheel. An estimated 86 people are killed in the accident. The fire resulting from the crash is severe enough that some of the victims are never able to be identified. 

Here is the episode on Disaster Area Podcast:

If you enjoy the podcast and want to support author/podcaster Jennifer Matarese, the following are some links to her social media accounts. I want her to be able to afford to write her next book, because I really want to read it. Become her patron on Patreon; you'll feel like a Renaissance-era Venetian arts patron, turning your money into art.

Tumblr: trollprincess

Instagram: disasterareapod

Patreon: disasterareapodcast 

Mastodon: trollprincess@ohai.social

Twitter: https://twitter.com/trollprincess

Hive: trollprincess

If you don't have money--this is quite understandable--the best free way to support Jennifer and her research, writing, and podcasting is to give Disaster Area a 5-star review on any podcast platform that allows reviews. Especially Apple (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/disaster-area/id1071491908). Giving a podcaster a 5-star review on Apple increases their podcast's visibility to new potential listeners.

Update (September 9, 2023): If you're interested in the alleged paranormal and haunting aspects of the Hammond Circus Train Wreck, Ghostly Podcast did a show about that on September 6th:

Train wreck at Hammond Circus Train Wreck, at Hammond, Indiana June 22, 1918.
This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer.

Monday, June 19, 2023

Amazon Audible Audiobook Deals Expiring on July 1, 2023

While your humble blogger here is in between day jobs, I've signed up to try my hand as an Amazon affiliate. As you know, I'm a big reader and a big podcast listener, so it seems like a natural fit for me to recommend some audiobooks. These books are on sale through July 1, 2023 at midnight. These are affiliate links, so if you click through and purchase something, I may earn a small commission on your purchase. Hopefully you have some Audible credits!

First up is Confident Women: Swindlers, Grifters, and Shapeshifters of the Feminine Persuasion, nonfiction/true crime by Tori Telfer. I haven't read this one, but I read Telfer's previous book Lady Killers: Deadly Women Throughout History, and that was fascinating.

Next is a classic: The Time Machine by H.G. Wells. This classic science fiction novel is 53% off during the sale period. 

H.G. Wells by Alvin Langdon Coburn, November 2, 1905, photogravure, from the National Portrait Gallery which has explicitly released this digital image under the CC0 license. (https://npg.si.edu/object/npg_S_NPG.87.288.F)

If you're into science fiction, you may also be interested to know that Robert Heinlein's Have Space Suit, Will Travel is also on sale.

This paranormal romance title, Crouching Tiger, Forbidden Vampire, is a book I've read, in print form, and I really enjoyed it. You can read my review here on the blog.

Scott Lewis's Mythology: Mega Collection is only available from Audible. This omnibus edition contains volumes 1-8 of Lewis's Classical Mythology Series. It includes stories from Celtic, Chinese, Egyptian, Greek, Hindu, Japanese, Mesopotamian, and Norse mythology.

Finally, if you like mythology and folklore and you also like classics, you may be interested in The Complete Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm for 41% off. 

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

June 14, 2017: The Grenfell Tower Fire

June 14, 2017: The Grenfell Tower apartment building in London catches fire due to an electrical fault in a refrigerator on its fourth floor. Fire and smoke spread rapidly, trapped by the building’s exterior cladding and insulation, which act like a chimney. 70 people die in the 24-story tower before the fire can be extinguished and two more die in the hospital. 70 others are injured.


If you enjoy the podcast and want to support author/podcaster Jennifer Matarese, the following are some links to her social media accounts. I want her to be able to afford to write her next book, because I really want to read it. Become her patron on Patreon; you'll feel like a Renaissance-era Venetian arts patron, turning your money into art.

Tumblr: trollprincess

Instagram: disasterareapod

Patreon: disasterareapodcast 

Mastodon: trollprincess@ohai.social

Twitter: https://twitter.com/trollprincess

Hive: trollprincess

If you don't have money--this is quite understandable--the best free way to support Jennifer and her research, writing, and podcasting is to give Disaster Area a 5-star review on any podcast platform that allows reviews. Especially Apple (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/disaster-area/id1071491908). Giving a podcaster a 5-star review on Apple increases their podcast's visibility to new potential listeners.

Public mural tribute for the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire disaster. This image was originally posted to Flickr by ChiralJon at https://flickr.com/photos/69057297@N04/42484928645

Friday, June 9, 2023

My Favorite History Podcasts

This long list covers history podcasts specifically; for my general list of five podcast recommendations, see this list: https://erinoriordan.blogspot.com/2021/01/5-recommended-podcasts.html

Here they are, in alphabetical order:

All Bad Things

The Atlas Obscura Podcast

Behind the Bastards

Podcast host Robert Evans - not the Robert Evans you're thinking of  - is an author whose novel is called After the Revolution. It's a dystopian fantasy about cybernetically-enhanced North Americans living after a civil war that splits the United States into very different countries. I haven't read it, but if you want to hear excerpts, Evans reads them on the show.

https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/59645604


Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford

The Constant: A History of Getting Things Wrong

The Dark Histories Podcast

Disaster Area 

Disastrous History: A Disasters of History Podcast

Disastrous History's host, Anthony Finchum, is a firefighter by profession, which gives him an interesting perspective on how disasters happen and what kinds of safety measures could have prevented them.

Footnoting History

Ghost Town: Strange History, True Crime, & The Paranormal

The History Cache Podcast 

History Extra Podcast

History for Weirdos

History Uncovered (the podcast of All That's Interesting)

Most Notorious! A True Crime History Podcast

I have a particular favorite episode of Most Notorious!, and it's #123: Harper Lee and Murderer Willie Maxwell with Casey Cep.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41883932-furious-hours

Now & Then

Omnibus

Strange Year: A Strange History Podcast

Useless Information

Useless Information host Steve Silverman is the author of several books, including Einstein's Refrigerator and Lindbergh's Artificial Heart.

https://uselessinformation.org/the-flip-side-of-history/


You Must Remember This

This one's mostly about movies and Hollywood history, so a very niche topic within U.S. history.

And now, because I happen to be in between day jobs at the moment, please enjoy the following affiliate audiobook link.

Thursday, June 1, 2023

Unfortunate (Mostly) Literary Happenings of Past Junes

ICYMI, this post is the latest in a series highlighting one of my two current books in process, The Almanac of Bad Days (tentative title). Past installments:

May

April

March

February

January

October

September


Trigger Warnings: Antisemitism, car accidents, death, drug overdose, Nazi mention, train crash


June 7, 1984: On or around this date, the Indian Army burns the Sikh Reference Library building in Punjab, India, to the ground. The library held approximately 20,000 materials, including irreplaceable handwritten manuscripts. The status of these materials is unknown and considered classified by the Indian government; they may have been destroyed, sold off into private collections, or held in an undisclosed archive somewhere.

June 7, 1993: NBA player Dražen Petrović is killed in a road accident while riding on the German Autobahn highway system in Bavaria. Petrović is not wearing a safety belt and is ejected from the vehicle, which is driven by his girlfriend.



June 9, 1865: Charles Dickens and his friend/perhaps lover Ellen Lawless Ternan are riding in a train on a voyage home from Paris. The train is near the village of Staplehurst, Kent, when it crosses a bridge. The engineer is unaware, until it's too late, that the bridge is closed for repairs and about 42 feet of track have been removed.


Dickens and Ternan, riding in the first-class car near the front of the train, are carried over the gap by the momentum of the engine. Their car lands on its side, but although they're shaken, they don’t have any serious injuries.


The center and rear cars of the train fall into the river below. Ten passengers are killed. Approximately 50 others are injured. Dickens helps render aid to the victims at the scene; some of them die in front of him. For the rest of his life he suffers flashbacks; in modern terms he could probably be said to suffer from PTSD.

June 9, 1870: Charles Dickens dies after suffering a stroke the previous day.


June 16, 1994: Kristen Pfaff, bassist for the band Hole, dies of a heroin overdose. She is 27 years old.


June 19, 1999: Stephen King suffers a broken leg, a broken hip, a collapsed lung, and a lacerated scalp when he’s struck and thrown 14 feet by a Dodge minivan driven by Bryan Edwin Smith. Smith, who was distracted by the movements of his unrestrained dog in the back of the vehicle, pleads guilty to a moving violation and receives a six-month suspended sentence.

June 21, 1858: Samuel “Mark Twain” Clemens’s brother Henry dies of wounds he received on June 13th as a crew member on the steamboat Pennsylvania when the boat’s boiler explodes. Mark Twain, at the time working as a crew member on the riverboat A.B. Chambers, felt guilt for the rest of his life for convincing his younger brother to work aboard a riverboat.


June 24, 2006: Three men in Pretzien, eastern Germany, burn copies of Anne Frank’s diary and the American flag in apparent support of the Nazis. The members of a far-right-wing group are charged with incitement of racial hatred.


June 29, 1950: Ring Lardner reports to prison to begin his 1-year sentence for refusing to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee. He’ll serve nine months. 


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