Bitter Harvest (Paperback)

Author: Ann Rule
See more in Murder - General
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780671868697
Publisher: Pocket Books
Publish Date: 2/1/1999
Buy.com Sku: 30441812
Item#: RRK6F4
Dimensions (in Inches) 7.25H x 4.25L x 1T
Pages: 496
 
"Sometimes the places where searing tragedies have happened are marked with visible scars. More often, when normalcy returns, only the most discerning eye or the most sensitive mind will know..." (from the first line)

Ann Rule probes the mind of Debora Green, a successful doctor and loving mother who seemed to epitomize the dreams of the American heartland--until a murderous rage brought death and destruction to her family. Photo insert.
 
Annotation:
The true story of a wealthy female doctor who killed two of her children and tried to slowly poison her husband. A noted true-crime writer, Ann Rule shows how the doctor's relaxed manner, especially during her interviews with the police, disguised her long descent into alcoholism and prescription drug addiction, as well as her tendency toward dramatic mood swings.

 

Praise
Kirkus
"Impossible to put down (though a little skimpy on psychiatric details), this is, thanks to the vivid, fascinating portrait of Debora and of the slow unraveling of her homicidal schemes, one of Rule's best." 01/01/1998

 
Author Bio
Ann Rule
True crime writer Ann Rule knew at an early age that she was destined for a life of crime. The daughter of a high school track coach and a professional caregiver in Lowell, Michigan, she paid frequent visits to her grandparents in nearby Montcalm County, where her grandfather was the sheriff and where their home, his office, and the county's jail were all under one roof. While her grandmother cooked for the inmates, Rule served them dinner. By age eight, she knew she wanted to become a police officer. Years later, after receiving her M.A. in criminal psychology from the University of Washington, Rule was hired by the Seattle police. Little did she know, but there would be no hold ups or even the occasional parking ticket in her future. At that time, policewomen were hired as glorified case workers. Discouraged by the system and eager to start a family with her then-husband, an English teacher, Rule resigned from the force and had four children. Soon after, her husband died of cancer, thus leaving Rule with a bustling family to support. Hence, the writing began. Rule's first true tales of crime and murder appeared anonymously in the pulp magazine True Confessions. Later, she was hired as a staff writer for True Detective magazine, covering two cases a week under the pen name, Andy Stack. Feeling her knack for true crime writing, Rule hit the books once again, this time in police science, so that she could conduct her own investigations. She learned how to collect fingerprints, record evidence, and judge the distance between a wound and a spatter of blood by the relative shape of one drop, among other things. With this added bit of expertise, Rule was primed for legitimate publications, like Cosmopolitan, Redbook, and Ladies Home Journal. Rule's articles on horrific true crimes appeared in national magazines for many years before she wrote her first book, THE STRANGER BESIDE ME in 1980. Inspired by her experiences working as a counselor at the Seattle Crisis Clinic with Ted Bundy, a man later revealed to be a vicious serial killer, STRANGER launched Rule's career as a successful participant in a relatively new genre of crime literature. She has since written several other true crime books, including SMALL SACRIFICES (1987), IF YOU REALLY LOVED ME (1991), and AND NEVER LET HER GO (1999).

 
 
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Excerpt

Chapter One

The wind had blown constantly that fall, but that wasn't unusual for Kansas. Most Kansans scarcely acknowledge the wind; however, on October 23, 1995, gusts were strong enough to scatter carefully piled mounds of leaves and make lights flicker on and off. Housewives set out candles and flashlights - just in case.

In Prairie Village, Dr. Debora Green went about all her usual errands. With three children to take care of, she practically needed a timetable to coordinate their activities. She would have welcomed a power outage so they could stay home, light faintly scented candles, and just talk to each other. Late that day, they were all back together in their beautiful new house on Canterbury Court: Debora; her son, Tim; and her daughters, Lissa and Kelly. After supper they went to bed in their separate rooms. Debora thought she had turned on the burglar alarm and the smoke alarm was set on "Rea

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