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A Death in Belmont
Unabridged
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Program Type
Audiobook
Publisher
Length
8 hrs and 21 mins
Audible Release Date
04-12-06
Audio Formats About Formats
2 3 4 Audible Enhanced Audio
Customer Rating

3.71 based on 190 ratings
 

Publisher's Summary

In 1963, with the city of Boston already terrified by a series of savage crimes known as the Boston Stranglings, a murder occurred in Belmont, just a few blocks from the house of Sebastian Junger's family, a murder that seemed to fit exactly the pattern of the Strangler. Roy Smith, a black man who had cleaned the victim's house that day, was convicted, but the terror of the Strangler continued.

Two years later, Albert DeSalvo, a handyman who had been working at the Jungers' home on the day of the Belmont murder, who had often spent time there alone with Sebastian and his mother, confessed in lurid detail to being the Boston Strangler.

By turns exciting and subtle, A Death in Belmont chronicles three lives that collide, and are ultimately destroyed, in the vortex of one of the most controversial serial murder cases in America. The power of the story and the brilliance of Junger's reporting place this book on the short shelf of classics beside In Cold Blood and Helter Skelter.

Listen to Sebastian Junger discuss his book on This Is Audible.

©2006 Sebastian Junger; (P)2006 HarperCollinsPublishers

What the Critics Say

  • Mystery Writers of America 2007 Edgar Nominee, Best Fact Crime

"He's a hell of a storyteller, and here he intertwines underlying moral quandaries....This perplexing story gains an extra degree of creepiness from Junger's personal connection to it." (Publishers Weekly)

Customer Reviews

Showing: 1-5 of 7
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2 of 2 people found this review helpful:
Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0 "Marvellous history of early sixties America"
By: Ian (Oxford Mills, Canada)
November 04, 2007
Sometimes an event is a lens into an entire culture. Sebastien Junger's account of a serial killer in Boston, follows the threads into the Deep South, the New England immigrant communities, and the workings of pre-CSI police forces. Junger has a personal connection to the event, since the killer worked briefly for the family. It's an engaging book that doesn't try to solve what is still a partially unsolved case.
Like Junger's previous book The Perfect Storm, A Death In Belmont follows the case from the first murder through the ninth, and on into several trials. One trial bizarrely ends in the midst of national shock at Kennedy's assassination; felt even more in Boston where Kennedy had been a senator.
2 of 12 people found this review helpful:
Rating 2.0Rating 2.0Rating 2.0Rating 2.0Rating 2.0 "Could have been better"
By: Louis (Wantagh, NY, USA)
September 04, 2006
The book started out OK. It was interesting to see if the Boston Strangler was responsible for this murder and not Roy Smith. But it didn't take too long to see the liberal bias this author has against the courts, police and corrections. The usual senario, Smith was abused as a child, uneducated, dicsriminated against, took drugs, got arrested every other week, went to prison, got a college degree, became respectable, etc. Add all that to the fact that he claimed he didn't do it, and somehow he automatically becomes the victim of society. Could have been a good book.
Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0Rating 4.0 "Completely Intriguing"
By: Kathy (Redmond, WA, USA)
August 12, 2006
This piece of writing immediately grabs the reader and doesn't let go until the end. Though provoking and well researched.
Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0 "Very interesting"
By: Angie (Kansas City, MO, USA)
August 08, 2006
I really enjoyed this book. I thought it was very interesting and well planned. I liked how it jumped back and forth between the story of the Bessie Goldberg murder and the other murders. It really set out a picture of our justice system in that time. The narrator was great.
Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0Rating 5.0 "Great Job"
By: Anna (Akron, OH, USA)
June 23, 2006
The author did a great job of telling the story, giving the facts and entertaining the reader. I was truely impressed.
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