The Mammoth Book of True Crime
The Mammoth Book of True Crime is a two volume anthology by British author Colin Wilson. It was published by Carroll & Graf Publishers, Inc., New York, in 1988, ISBN 1-85487-519-1.
The first volume is divided alphabetically into sections that reflect the various aspects of crime.
Volume One
A
- Acquittals
- Alibis
- Air Crimes
- Arson
- Artist's Crimes
- Assassination
C
- Cannibalism
- Chance in a Million
- Children Who Kill
- Con Men
- Cop Killers
- Country Killing
- Crimes of Passion
D
- Doctors of Death
- Dominance
- Drugs
- Dual Personality
F
- Families of Death
- Female Murderers
- Forgery
H
- Headless Corpses
- High School Murder
- Hired Killers
- Homosexual Murder
- Houses of Death
- Husband Killers
I
- Imposters
- Inheritance Crime
- Intolerance
J
- Justice Delayed
K
- Kidnappers
- Killer Couples
L
- Lady-killers
- Left-luggage Murders
- Lethal Lawyers
- Libel
- Lonely Hearts Killers
M
O
- Occult Detection
- Office Crimes
P
- Parent Killers
- Perverts
- Poisoners
- Police corruption
- Protection Rackets
R
- Robber Barons
S
- Sabotage
- Servants Who Murder
- Sleep-walking Slayers
- Stick-up Men
- Stranglers
- Suicide
- Super-thieves
T
- Train Murders
U
- Underworlds
- Unwanted Lovers
V
- Vicious Triangles
- Victims
- Vital Clues
W
- War Crimes
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gollark: If *evolution*... well, "attempts" would be anthropomorphizing it... to cross said chasm, all it can do is just throw broken ones at it repeatedly with no understanding, and select for better ones until one actually sticks.
gollark: If I want to cross a chasm with a bridge, or something, I can draw on my limited knowledge of physics and materials science and whatever and put together a somewhat sensible prototype, then make inferences from what happens to it, and get something working out.
gollark: No. We can reason about problems in various ways. So can some animals.
gollark: It doesn't have its own will. It's a giant non-agent mess driven by tons of interacting blind optimization processes.
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