Axed Audiolibro Por Miles Donovan arte de portada

Axed

The Untold Shocking True Story of Lizzie Borden and the Fall River Murders

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Axed

De: Miles Donovan
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual

Voz Virtual es una narración generada por computadora para audiolibros..

THE LEGEND REEXAMINED – THE CRIME THAT SHOCKED A NATION RETURNS TO THE STAND

On the sweltering morning of August 4, 1892, a scream shattered the stillness of Fall River, Massachusetts. Within minutes, a quiet home on Second Street became the most infamous address in America. Inside lay Andrew and Abby Borden—bludgeoned, brutalized, and left to bleed on the polished floors of their own home. Standing in the doorway was their daughter, Lizzie Borden—calm, pale, and soon to be accused of the most sensational crime of the nineteenth century.

Axed: The Untold Shocking True Story of Lizzie Borden and the Fall River Murders peels back the rhyme, the rumor, and the myth to expose the chilling truth behind one of history’s most enduring mysteries. Drawing from newly uncovered transcripts, police files, newspaper archives, and modern forensic analysis, author Miles Donovan reconstructs the crime that captivated the world—and reveals how a flawed investigation, a divided town, and a media frenzy transformed a family tragedy into an American legend.

THE HOUSE OF SECRETS AND THE CITY OF HYPOCRISY

Inside the Borden home, tension simmered beneath the lace and respectability. Locked doors divided family members. Money dictated affection. And in a society that worshiped purity and obedience, Lizzie Borden was a woman trapped between duty and rebellion. What began as silent resentment would soon ignite into one of the most shocking acts of violence ever recorded in the Gilded Age.

THE INVESTIGATION THAT FAILED HISTORY

From bungled police work and contaminated evidence to the courtroom spectacle that followed, Axed examines how the world’s first true media trial unfolded. Reporters swarmed Fall River, printing lies faster than facts. The jury—all male—faced the unthinkable question: could a proper churchgoing woman commit such horror? And when Lizzie walked free, the nation was divided forever between those who saw innocence—and those who saw evil disguised in petticoats.

NEW FORENSIC REVELATIONS

Using modern psychological profiling and investigative techniques, Donovan revisits the case with fresh eyes. What did the blood patterns truly reveal? Why was the dress burned? Who else had motive to kill? And what do recently unearthed documents suggest about the evidence that mysteriously vanished after the trial? Each page reopens the locked doors of 92 Second Street and forces readers to confront how easily truth can be buried beneath legend.

A CINEMATIC JOURNEY INTO VICTORIAN DARKNESS

Written with the pacing of a thriller and the depth of historical nonfiction, Axed transports readers into a world of corseted secrecy, moral hypocrisy, and media obsession. The Borden murders weren’t just a crime—they were the birth of America’s fascination with the female killer. Through vivid detail and haunting narrative, Donovan transforms familiar folklore into a gripping psychological portrait of repression, rage, and the dangerous power of silence.

THE TRUTH BEHIND THE RHYME

“Lizzie Borden took an axe…” Everyone knows the words, but few know the woman. Axed tears apart the nursery rhyme to reveal what history refused to see—the fear, the manipulation, and the societal constraints that built a powder keg inside a locked house. Whether she was guilty or framed, victim or fiend, Lizzie Borden became a symbol of everything Victorian America feared in its women: intelligence, defiance, and the will to be free.

DISCOVER THE REAL STORY

Dive into the case that never truly closed. The axe fell in 1892—but the questions have never stopped.

Américas Biografías y Memorias Crímenes Reales Estados Unidos Crimen
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thank you so much for a wonderful book... thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you

I thought it was really good

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Adds absolutely nothing new to prior books, low on detail, invented internal monolog without justification, but above all an absolute fixation on the concept of silence. The house is silent. Emma is silent. Lizzie is silent. Over and over and over so much silence. Narrated by AI, which is competent, but would not justify a price higher than that of the eBook. Free with Prime otherwise I would have returned it.

Most boring Borden book I have ever read

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The author described in detail scenes that no one had actual knowledge of. Maybe all authors do that. I tried to listen to the book till the end but I couldn’t do it. I don’t believe the state proved its case against Lizzy. Whether she was guilty or not, the investigation did not prove her guilt beyond a shadow of a doubt. The author promotes the theory that she was found innocent because she was a woman. The jurors reached an unanimous decision based on evidence but in this story, they were portrayed as bad guys for letting a guilty woman go free. Bottom line, I wouldn’t recommend this book to anyone. First negative review I’ve ever written.

This story went on too long

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