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The Angel Makers
The Angel Makers: The True Story of the Most Astonishing Murder Ring in History | Patti McCracken
5 posts | 5 read | 13 to read
Nagyrev, Hungary, 1929. Over 160 mysterious deaths. A group of local wives conspiring together, and one woman at the centre of it all... The Angel Makers is the astonishing true story of the longest and most prolific murder spree ever recorded. In the winter of 1929, reporters from all over the world travelled to Hungary ready to cover the largest civilian mass murder trials in history. From his front-row seat in the courtroom, New York Times journalist Jack MacCormac was spellbound by the horror that unfolded. He had never heard anything like it - but nor had anyone. In the rural farming village of Nagyrev, a group of wives had formed the most sensational murder ring in existence: The Angel Makers. Led by a sharp-minded midwife known as Auntie Suzy, numerous women rid themselves of unwanted relatives, nearly all of whom were men, spooning doses of arsenic into soup and wine, stirring it into biscuits and brandy. It was like murder was just another chore. It would take over 15 years and 160 deaths before the unlikely gang of murderesses came to justice. Using MacCormac's coverage of the trials and years of her own research and interviews, Patti McCracken pieces together with absorbing detail the lives of Auntie Suzy, her wide network of killers, the unsuspecting victims and the villagers who witnessed it all. The Angel Makers is the utterly gripping retelling of an almost unbelievable - yet entirely true - moment in crime history.
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review
OutsmartYourShelf
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Panpan

Hungary in 1929 saw the exposure of over a hundred deaths which were linked to a small group of people in a village called Nagyrev. For over a decade, Auntie Suzie, the local midwife, had helped local women get rid of inconvenient relatives by means of poison. They came to be known as The Angel Makers.

Given the source material this should have been an interesting read, but it turned out to be a chore to get through.

OutsmartYourShelf I struggled with the author's writing style I think, especially the way they seemed to be obsessed with conveying that Suzie was fat. Countless uses of “waddled“, “plopped“, “heavily“ etc - it was just relentless & not needed. I think she was compared to a cow at one point! Suzie committed some terrible acts, which should be the focus, so being told just once that she was overweight would have been enough & I think it detracted from the book. 2⭐ (edited) 11mo
Librarybelle That‘s a shame! 11mo
jlhammar I didn‘t really get on with her writing style either. Still a pick for me, but I didn‘t like it nearly as much as I expected to and it took me ages to get through (kept setting it aside). The story is fascinating, but it was missing that narrative drive for me. 11mo
DieAReader 👋🏻👋🏻👋🏻Bye! Bye! 11mo
32 likes5 comments
review
jlhammar
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Pickpick

Finally finished! Started this months ago. Kept setting it aside. The story is really fascinating (the postscript about a crime in 1986 London, Ontario and how it relates to these poisonings in Hungary decades earlier is unbelievable!) and McCracken clearly did a ton of research. I appreciated learning about life in a 1920s Hungarian village, but I think it was perhaps overly detailed. The story (which really is astonishing) got bogged down a bit.

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review
BeckyWithTheGoodBooks
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Pickpick

I enjoyed this account of a Hungarian village midwife at the center of a murder ring. Auntie Suzy herself is as cold as any serial killer, but other women got involved for much more complicated reasons. McCracken writes this like a novel which mostly worked. It unfolds slowly, not unlike the poisoning deaths of the women‘s victims. However, it meandered with irrelevant details at times instead of exploring deeper themes. Solid true crime. 4⭐️

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blurb
jlhammar
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I want to read pretty much everything my fellow campers have nominated so far (voting for #CampLitsy2023 is going to be impossible!), but I‘ll throw my six in the mix for fun. The four pictured because I already own them and am eager to get to them. I think all are repeat noms.

My fifth is a title out from Europa next month, The Postcard by Anne Berest. And my sixth is a new nonfiction title (tagged) that sounds excellent. I‘ll tag all six below.

See All 19 Comments
JamieArc The Angel Makers and The Postcard both sound great! 2y
Cathythoughts Loving the look of all these 👍🏻❤️ 2y
batsy Nice that you included Bad Cree! It sounds really good. 2y
Bookwormjillk That NF sounds good! 2y
squirrelbrain I‘ve just been looking at Bad Cree in a bookshop! 2y
TheKidUpstairs Angel Makers sounds excellent! All great choices. Voting is going to be tough! 2y
Cinfhen Love your suggestions and tagged book sounds AMAZING 2y
BarbaraBB They all look so good. I only l know, read and loved Birnam Wood. 2y
Megabooks Very excited to see your recs! I‘m really enjoying going through the nominees. Welcome back to camp! 🏕️😁 2y
merelybookish Oh gosh! Ive been away from Litsy for a few days and will need some time to start processing all the #CampLitsy suggestions!! 2y
she.hearts.horror What did you think of Bad Cree? It wasn‘t what I expected, but I did appreciate it. 2y
jlhammar @she.hearts.horror I haven‘t read it yet, but looking forward to it. 2y
69 likes1 stack add19 comments
review
GerardtheBookworm
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Pickpick

A historical, true crime that took place between 1916 to 1929 in a small village in Hungary. Know as the "Angel Makers Murder Ring," this group of innocent looking women began poisoning men who abused and mistreated them and continued their killing spree for over a decade until they were caught. Interesting and informative, this nonfiction read is sure to please crime fans.

9 likes2 stack adds