SQUEE! Came home to #bookmail from the fabulous @Liberty 😆 Thanks again for being so generous and hosting your giveaways last weekend, I'm pretty positive this is the best ARC I've ever gotten my hands on! 🤘🏽
#seewhatihavewon
SQUEE! Came home to #bookmail from the fabulous @Liberty 😆 Thanks again for being so generous and hosting your giveaways last weekend, I'm pretty positive this is the best ARC I've ever gotten my hands on! 🤘🏽
#seewhatihavewon
Was asleep during #seewhatihavewon 😭 & it was open to those outside of the US 😭😭 Look forward to reading See What I Have Done at some point! Loved seeing everyone's #truecrime recs. I flew through this one last week, thanks to @Reviewsbylola ☺️ I recalled this case, it was all over international media. Despite the B movie cover, this was a gripping read & good on the investigative details. Devastating towards the end when the bodies were found.
I put all the entries from the #SEEWHATIHAVEWON giveaway into the random name generator and @swishandflick won! Thanks to everyone for participating. I'm rolling out a few more giveaways tomorrow, so stay tuned! 🎉📚😘
#SEEWHATIHAVEWON my favourite true crime read. 📚❤️️
This was the latest true crime book to totally blow my mind. So so good!!! I'd still like to take a tour of Chicago and see all the sights from the book that still exist. Amazing!
#SEEWHATIHAVEWON @Liberty
#SEEWHATIHAVEWON I read this a long time ago, but it remains one of my favorite true crime stories. Ann Rule has a great way of telling a story. I don't have my copy any more, but I think this was the cover I had. @Liberty
In 1988 a family is shattered when two daughters accuse their father, a deputy sheriff, of abuse. Soon the allegations involve torture and satanic rituals. The accused deny the charges and then their memories are "recovered." They begin to recall the occult acts. The most disturbing aspect of these events is the malleability of memory and American hysteria. A tragic and terrifying true crime book. My copy is beat the hell up. #SEEWHATIHAVEWON
#SEEWHATIHAVEWON I don't make it a habit of reading gruesome crime stories, but this is probably my favorite as it gave me insight to Capote's personality.