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From the archives

Positively Shady

The glamorous activism of M.A.C Cosmetics

Muslim Pride

A timely LGBTQ memoir

Minor Hockey as Big Business

The disturbing shift from kids’ game to pricey investment

Composite Sketches

Two tales of true crime

Basil Guinane

The Seventh Shot: On the Trail of Canada’s .22-Calibre Killer

Ann Burke

Latitude 46 Publishing

174 pages, softcover and ebook

Watching the Devil Dance: How a Spree Killer Slipped through the Cracks of the Criminal Justice System

Will Toffan

Biblioasis

200 pages, softcover and ebook

The Biblical tale of Cain and Abel is the original true crime story. Murder ballads were once quite popular throughout Scandinavia and the British Isles. Victorian penny dreadfuls, with their grisly chronicles of wrongdoing, often sold millions of copies. Magazines from The New Yorker and Vanity Fair to True Detective, with its classic lurid covers, have long sated people’s appetite for deadly sins.

In 1966, Truman Capote struck gold with In Cold Blood, which details the gruesome murders of the Clutter family, outside of Holcomb, Kansas, in 1959. That “non-fiction novel” opened the floodgates even wider. Since then, countless bestsellers have followed, about the likes of Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy, and Charles Manson (Vincent Bugliosi’s Helter Skelter, from 1974, being the most successful of them all).

Of course, Hollywood has also mined the true crime vein. HBO’s The Jinx and I’ll Be Gone in the Dark and...

Basil Guinane enjoys a happy retirement in Creemore, Ontario.

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