The Long Shadow of Small Ghosts: Murder and Memory in an American City
by Laura Tillman
Scribner
Hardcover
From the publisher's website:
In Cold Blood meets Adrian Nicole LeBlanc’s Random Family:
A harrowing, profoundly personal investigation of the causes, effects,
and communal toll of a deeply troubling crime—the brutal murder of three
young children by their parents in the border city of Brownsville,
Texas.
On March 11, 2003, in Brownsville, Texas—one of America’s
poorest cities—John Allen Rubio and Angela Camacho murdered their three
young children. The apartment building in which the brutal crimes took
place was already rundown, and in their aftermath a consensus developed
in the community that it should be destroyed. It was a place, neighbors
felt, that was plagued by spiritual cancer.
In 2008, journalist Laura Tillman covered the story for The Brownsville Herald.
The questions it raised haunted her, particularly one asked by the sole
member of the city’s Heritage Council to oppose demolition: is there
any such thing as an evil building? Her investigation took her far
beyond that question, revealing the nature of the toll that the crime
exacted on a city already wracked with poverty. It sprawled into a
six-year inquiry into the larger significance of such acts, ones so
difficult to imagine or explain that their perpetrators are often
dismissed as monsters alien to humanity.
With meticulous
attention and stunning compassion, Tillman surveyed those surrounding
the crimes, speaking with the lawyers who tried the case, the family’s
neighbors and relatives and teachers, even one of the murderers: John
Allen Rubio himself, whom she corresponded with for years and ultimately
met in person. The result is a brilliant exploration of some of our
age’s most important social issues, from poverty to mental illness to
the death penalty, and a beautiful, profound meditation on the truly
human forces that drive them. It is disturbing, insightful, and
mesmerizing in equal measure.
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