• The Shadow of Death

  • The Hunt for the Connecticut River Valley Killer
  • By: Philip E. Ginsburg
  • Narrated by: Stephen Bowlby
  • Length: 15 hrs and 53 mins
  • 4.2 out of 5 stars (19 ratings)

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The Shadow of Death

By: Philip E. Ginsburg
Narrated by: Stephen Bowlby
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Publisher's summary

In the mid-1980s, someone stabbed six women to death in the Connecticut River Valley on the border between New Hampshire and Vermont. The murderer remains at large and the total number of his victims is unknown. In this brilliant work of true crime reportage, New York Times-bestselling author Philip E. Ginsburg provides fascinating insights into the groundbreaking forensic methods used to track the killer and paints indelible portraits of the lives he cut so tragically short.

The Shadow of Death recreates the fear that consumed the idyllic region when young women began to disappear with horrifying regularity. Friends and family of the victims were left to endure the bottomless pain of imagining their loved ones' terrifying last moments. Desperate to stop the slayings, local police and FBI investigators used exotic new techniques to try to unmask the murderer. Ginsburg documents the extraordinary efforts of psychologist John Philpin as he risks his own emotional stability to get inside the mind of a madman.

Law enforcement officials identified several suspects and came tantalizingly close to putting all the pieces of the puzzle together, but it was only after a pregnant woman survived a brutal attack that the killings appeared to stop. The question remains: Could they start again?

©1993 Philip E. Ginsburg (P)2022 Tantor

What listeners say about The Shadow of Death

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Unaware of these crimes

Lived in northern CT and, somehow I was unaware of all these tragic deaths. The book has a nice pace.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Ending..

It being a cold case I know it unresolved but the last hour last chapter survivors is amazing. The narrator grew on me. At first he was kinda muffled sounding I just had to kick down the treble on my stereo and it was good. Good book by a good author.

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    2 out of 5 stars
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Stream of consciousness

I kept waiting for this story to come together, but it never did. I felt like it was a (very long) series of unconnected notes. It was almost like the author was unable to edit anything out. Even the most banal detail was included for no apparent reason. “He told her he had been up reading.” “She looked as though she rarely wore makeup.” And don’t get me started with the excessive references to the women’s weight. “Obese” at 180 pounds. Unhappy with her weight at 140. This had nothing to do with the story. Unsolved crimes are only interesting if there is a compelling story to tell. So very many times I found myself saying, “So what?”

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