Orchestrated to the sounds of getaway cars and machine guns, the
abduction of Oklahoma City businessman Charles Urschel in 1933 was
a highly publicized crime in an era when gangsters were folk heroes
and kidnapping had become a scourge. The criminals' interstate
flight to a desolate hideout in Texas called for federal action,
instigating the most intensive manhunt the country had yet seen. It
also set in motion a chain of events that would have lasting
significance for crime-fighting in America.
In an exciting account of that celebrated manhunt, Stanley
Hamilton rekindles the spirit of yesterday's newsreels to chronicle
the pursuit and capture of George "Machine Gun" Kelly and his wife,
Kathryn. Tapping a wealth of newspaper reports, court transcripts,
literary accounts, and recollections of participants, he draws
readers into the chase and its aftermath, unraveling what was then
considered the most compelling crime mystery of the day.
Hamilton sets the stage with an overview of the lawlessness of
that era and of Kelly's formative years, getting under the skin of
a hard-boiled criminal to show us what made Kelly tick. He
assembles a cast of larger-than-life characters to weave this tale
of true crime, one of the largest of whom was the 38-year-old
director of the national police force, J. Edgar Hoover.
Hoover had revitalized an ineffective agency whose operatives
were still not authorized to carry firearms or make arrests, and
when the Urschel case broke, it was Hoover who stepped up to
coordinate the manhunt. Hamilton takes readers behind the scenes in
Hoover's operation to show how this case was responsible for
popularizing the G-man and institutionalizing the FBI, creating the
agent-as-hero image that replaced earlier characterizations of
blundering foils to glamorous gangsters.
, br>This iconic kidnapping case, breathlessly followed by a
fascinated public, was so quickly and effectively concluded that it
was largely instrumental in bringing about the end of the Gangster
Era in America. "Machine Gun Kelly's Last Stand" brings that era to
life again by providing a fresh look at one of America's most
notorious criminals, vividly recreating the times in which he lived
and sharing the stories of the people whose lives he touched.
General
| Imprint: |
University Press of Kansas
|
| Country of origin: |
United States |
| Release date: |
June 2003 |
| First published: |
June 2003 |
| Authors: |
Stanley Hamilton
|
| Dimensions: |
245 x 178 x 28mm (L x W x T) |
| Format: |
Hardcover
|
| Pages: |
224 |
| ISBN-13: |
978-0-7006-1247-5 |
| Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
True stories >
Crime
Promotions
|
| LSN: |
0-7006-1247-5 |
| Barcode: |
9780700612475 |
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