Murder - the most appalling crime of all. It comes in many guises and is as diverse as the victims and perpetrators themselves. But no matter how horrifying, it fascinates as much as it repels. In this updated edition of THE LAW KILLERS, journalist Alexander McGregor examines some of the country's most chilling cases and peels back the civilised layers of our society to reveal some of the horrors that lie beneath, The Templeton Wood Murders - Was the same serial killer responsible and is he at last identified? Little Boy Blue - The schoolboy with a continuing compulsion to kill. Forgive Me Father - A trail of slaughter that spread to two countries? Anything You Can Do - The country's most notorious father and son who killed again and again. To Love, Honour and . . . Kill - The double wife-killer who thought he had committed the perfect murder . . . and nearly had. 'Alexander McGregor is the safest pair of hands in Scottish true crime . . . accurate, detailed and written with rare sensitivity - for good reason, The Law Killers was a bestseller' Emeritus Professor David Wilson, leading UK criminologist and presenter of In the Footsteps of Killers and Crime Files
Alexander McGregor Boeken



Journalist Campbell McBride's first crime book, The Law Town Killers, is a success but now it's attracting some unwanted attention. McBride's going to have to return to what, when he wrote about it, seemed like a straightforward murder case - a woman strangled by her boyfriend. Otherwise, somebody he cares about might be at risk.
The Shaping of Popular Consent
A Comparative Study of the Soviet Union and the United States 1929-1941
- 376bladzijden
- 14 uur lezen
Focusing on the interwar years from 1929 to 1941, this book examines how the ruling elites in both the USSR and the US sought to gain popular consent through the use of visual arts. It challenges the prevailing notion that these two superpowers were fundamentally oppositional by exploring their similarities in employing cultural media to win public support. The analysis raises critical questions about the necessity of popular trust in their political systems and the strategies used to engage citizens during a transformative period marked by mass communication.