
Bringing Adam Home
The Abduction That Changed America
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Almost 30 years later, this case still stirs up raw emotions and terror in any parent whose child wanders away--even for an instant. This is the story of the kidnapping and murder of Adam Walsh in 1981 and the tireless efforts of his parents to solve it. (Adam's father became the host of "America's Most Wanted" because of the murder.) Robert Fass narrates in a doleful, sober voice that matches the book's tone. To his credit, he keeps the story of what happened going when it could easily devolve into melodrama. Fass shades his voice to indicate that a character is speaking, but for the most part he uses a straightforward tone and an even pace to deliver the harrowing story. R.I.G. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine

Starred review from November 29, 2010
On July 27, 1981, six-year-old Adam Walsh disappeared from a Sears store in Hollywood, Fla., and his partial remains were found in a canal two weeks later. Novelist and nonfiction author Standiford (Last Train to Paradise) charts with devastating precision the decades-long search for the killer and the evolution of Revé and John Walsh (John was executive producer and host of America's Most Wanted) from grieving parents into powerful advocates for missing children. In 1983, Jacksonville police arrested drifter Otis Toole for arson and murder, and he began talking about a little boy he'd killed in south Florida. Myriad confessions (and retractions) followed, containing details only the killer would know, but evidence disappeared, potential witnesses were never interviewed, and Toole was never charged. Convicted on other charges, he died in prison in 1996. Twenty-five years after Adam's abduction, the Walshes asked Matthews, a renowned polygraph investigator and retired detective, to conduct an independent investigation; Matthews concluded that Toole was the killer. Standiford's account is riveting, heartbreaking, and supports John Walsh's statement: "it's not about closure; it's about justice." 8 pages of color photos.
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