Web Analytics Made Easy - Statcounter

Keep your eyes on the Shadows

Share this Post:
Image courtesy of Berkley
Image courtesy of Berkley

SHADOWMAN: AN ELUSIVE PSYCHO KILLER AND THE BIRTH OF FBI PROFILING
RON FRANSCELL
� 2022 Berkley
$27.00
304 pages


It was toward the end of June, 1973, and it wasn't quite morning when 14-year-old Heidi Jaeger was awakened by a breeze.

Had she left the tent-flap open around midnight when she'd come back from an outhouse run? No, she'd been creeped out by something and had gone straight back to the tent, but she was sure she'd zipped it up tight. All was well then — her siblings were asleep like a pile of puppies. But now, in this predawn hour, something was definitely wrong.

Susie, Heidi's 7-year-old sister, was gone, and there was a neatly cut hole in the tent near where her head should've been.

FBI Special Agent Byron Dunbar was called. He was a local who'd served under J. Edgar Hoover before returning home to care for his parents. He knew the terrain, so he started gathering evidence, but there wasn't much of it. He began interviewing people who might have had information about the abduction, but even in everybody-knows-everybody Manhattan, Montana, nobody seemed to know a thing.

Then someone began phoning the Jaeger home, taunting Susie's mother with false clues. And 19-year-old Sandy Smallegan disappeared.

Crime-solving in the early 1970s was still relatively simple, although the FBI had been working with intriguing new theories. It'd already been established that some killers could be preidentified by their habits and personality quirks. Dunbar knew this, and with the bureau's help, he'd severely narrowed the list of suspects. But he was frustrated — until it was suggested that he use a new method of crime solving.

Voiceprinting, they said, was nearly as individual and distinctive as a fingerprint...

So, you know that squinchy-eyed face you make when the rest of your body cringes? Yeah, that's what you'll get when you read ShadowMan.

You'll recoil, because these crimes were gruesome, and author Ron Franscell doesn't candy-coat that. Instead, he gives readers an armchair tour of an evil, depraved mind and the things it can do. Squirm and twist awhile, make that face, then let yourself be immersed in Franscell's detailed account of the development of profiling methodology in the FBI. Yes, true crime fanatics, you'll love how murder and history are woven together, especially if you're already familiar with the bureau's ways. Whodunit fans won't exactly find mystery in this story, but the background will appeal to you.

If you've got books about the Body Farm on your shelf, or anything by John Douglas or Robert Ressler, ShadowMan deserves to be right next to them. If you love a gruesome tale of crime-solving, wrap your head around this one.

Also: here's another book for true crime fans: Bone Deep by Charles Bosworth Jr. and Joel J. Schwartz. It's the story of Betsy Faria's murder — she was stabbed 55 times! — and a miscarriage of justice that jailed an innocent man and left a killer to roam free.