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Homicide Special
Homicide Special | Miles Corwin
1 post | 3 read
With an Updated Epilogue by the Author "A compelling portrait of seasoned homicide cops at work. This is L.A.'s darkest side: ironic, heart-breaking, stunningly violent, unfailingly human. Riveting." -Jonathan Kellerman The mandate for Los Angeles' unique police unit Homicide Special is to take on the toughest, most controversial, and highest-profile cases. In this "literate, unfailingly interesting work of true crime" (Kirkus Reviews), acclaimed writer Miles Corwin uses unprecedented access to narrate six of the unit's cases-and capture its newest generation at work. When a call girl from Kiev dies in the line of duty, detectives Chuck Knolls and Brian McCartin seek her killer among a circle of Russian women who have been sold into white slavery. When a gangster's daughter takes a bullet, veterans Jerry Stephens and Paul Coulter trace clues scattered across the country to a Manhattan real-estate magnate. A cold case is reopened; a mother-daughter drowning and a baffling rape/murder are solved. And, finally, Corwin re-creates the investigation surrounding the late Bonny Lee Blakley, allegedly murdered by her actor-husband, Robert Blake. With a revised epilogue updating each of these fascinating cases, Homicide Special offers a riveting, behind-the-scenes look at one of the preeminent units of homicide detectives in the country.
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review
JasonMetz
Homicide Special | Miles Corwin
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Bailedbailed

Another book to study up on police procedural. There's some fantastic insight, but the book is an absolute slog. A ton of info dumps, disjointed structure, terrible dialog with awful forced cornball jokes to capture the fraternal spirit of the precinct--compelling material, top notch research, but not a compelling read in terms of creative non-fiction. I'll shelve it and treat it as a resource, but really, i have my doubts I ever go back to it.