May review for Book Riot's Read Harder 2018: Thunderstruck by Erik Larson, 2006. [true crime category]
Thunderstruck by Erik Larson is just so FULL. Full of information, full of characters, just full full full. I remember reading Devil In The White City by Larson in high school, and it was the same kind of full. Engaging but still informational and relatively unbiased. I was excited to read something by him again. Thunderstruck is a historical novel describing one of the greatest criminal chases of all time, the way a murderer was caught using a new-fangled technology: wireless communication! I tell you what, I know more about the minutiae of wireless telegraphy than I ever thought I would, after reading this book.
However, there is a downfall to such depth: it took so long to get to the murder. LOTS of backstory. Larson basically starts at the beginning of both men's lives: Hawley Crippen, the unlikely murderer, and Guglielmo Marconi, the much-debated "creator" of wireless communication. There is so much detail that at points you forget that this is a book about a murder at all! Which was definitely an interesting way to present a true crime book.
Speaking of the murder. We never actually see it. The ending of the book was unbiased -- it presented differing opinions of how or why or when Crippen killed his wife, making sure to illustrate points of contention, although they may bear no fruit. It is a disaffected way to look at a crime, especially one as controversial as this one was, but I feel like the ambiguity lends itself to this story. Bury yourself in a historical book and pick up some Erik Larson.

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