By Patrick Brode
Paper - 9780814334485
Price: $22.95t
Subjects: Regional Studies: History
Series: Painted Turtle Series
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Awards
Published by Wayne State University Press
Patrick Brode is a lawyer in Windsor, Ontario, and author of five books on the history of law in Canada, including Sir John Beverley Robinson: Bone and Sinew of the Compact, a finalist for the City of Toronto Book Award in 1985, and The Odyssey of John Anderson, a finalist for the Trillium Award in 1990.
“A carefully constructed history of a specific criminal panic in a particular city that also speaks to historical issues that affected people and communities across the postwar North America.”
— The Michigan Historical Review
“Brode has a sensational story to tell, but his delivery is clear and straightforward, devoid of feverish prose. He writes with a cool objective sadly missing from the original overwrought reports about The Slasher.”
— Hour Detroit
“Brode goes into great detail to show not just the communal effects but also the ways in which these attacks and murders changes (for a moment) the legal process. Sure there are lots of juicy details- creepy letters, threatening notes etched into the wall in the Windsor Tunnel, accounts by the victims and police reports, but we have to keep in mind that Slasher is pieced together with information, not rhythm, in mind. Be patient. Still, traffic accident gawkers should get as much out of this book as case-studying grad students surely will.”
— MetroTimes
“An intriguing look into gay history—a small-town story of the sort that we don't get enough of, since most books tend to concentrate on the great metropolitan centers.”
— Michael H. Hodges, feature writer at the Detroit News
“The Slasher Killings is an excellent account of community and police responses to unusual crimes and shows us how crime can sometimes provoke a deeply disproportionate reaction. A fascinating case study—it is also a very good read.”
— Jim Phillips, professor of law and history at the University of Toronto and editor-in-chief of the Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History