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, by Jack Olsen
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Product details
File Size: 2527 KB
Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
Publication Date: September 26, 2018
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B07HQYGG1H
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#26,825 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
This is one of those stories that I think people can really benefit from reading, because this life-long thief and, later, serial killer had exceptional skill at charming people and getting them to trust him immediately. Even police who had dealt with his countless burglaries for many years didn't think he could be violent.He would visit new friends and just stay. People who had just met him allowed him to live with them for free. He befriended 4 young women just out of high school sharing a condominium and moved himself in. He then charmed and manipulated 3 of them so completely that they allowed him to live with them for months for free and believed his increasingly implausible tales and excuses while he brutally murdered 3 women in the neighborhood.
I am a Jack Olsen fan so while I did like the story, I was amazed by the mis-spellings, fractured sentences, and confusing synopsis (not always using the right word or mistaking one character for another). Still I do like the writing and the story. I'm an English Major so maybe I'm just a little too picky?
In the very early 90s, I was the night crew manager of a grocery store in downtown Kirkland. We had just finished "throwing freight" -- a fancy phrase for stocking shelves, basically -- when a police officer came in towards the end of our shift. The sun was just coming up. I asked him, "How's it going tonight?" He responded, "Bad night. Somebody killed a gal. We found her near a dumpster." Surely not the response I expected, particularly in Kirkland. Murders seemed to never happen there.But the murder actually happened in Bellevue, a few miles away. I didn't think much about it again for a long time, even though it was in the papers. And more murders were to come. But about a decade later, I read another true-crime book -- I believe "Riverman. . ." by Dr. Robert Keppel, another excellent read -- where in a chapter or two, Dr. Keppel described a serial murder case in Bellevue that he had been involved with: this case. Immediately I thought of that night over a decade earlier in Kirkland. Back then while I was stocking, I was probably grumbling, under my breath, "Why do I have to be up all night stocking while everybody else is out having fun?" If that's what I was thinking it was surely a bad assumption.I've been intrigued by this case for quite awhile, so I finally bought this book online this week. I finished it in a couple of days; it would have been only one day if I hadn't been sidetracked by prior commitments. The book is that good. I've read books by many other crime authors -- Truman Capote, Dr. Keppel, Ann Rule, M. William Phelps at least -- but this was my first read from Jack Olsen. I really appreciated the fact that Mr. Olsen sticks to "just the facts;" he actually describes this style of writing at the very end of the book in an Author's Notes section. Too many true-crime authors go off the rails a bit with conjecture. A little bit of conjecture is good; too much and it becomes, well, just conjecture.And the biggest conjecture really is: why did George Waterfield Russell -- "Waterfield" to distinguish him from a million other George Russells, most of them "good" -- begin killing? Was it the common belief that, because his mom left him TWICE, that he became a misogynist? Was it that he never felt like he fit in, being black in the predominantly white neighborhoods of Mercer Island? (I'm white and I don't like many of the "islanders" myself, I'll admit.) Or was it something else? I'm sure there are a million excuses.Mr. Russell -- and yes, I do cringe using the "Mr." prefix in this case -- was like a stray cat, begging for a bite to eat, and if he suckered someone into giving him some catnip he was likely to hang around for more. And hopefully you never really were a victim of his long and deadly claws. But one of the gals that he lived with -- make that "mooched off of" -- later made a statement that was perhaps the most truthful thing about a guy who seemed to be such a huge liar. "I believe that there was something neurologically different about him from the beginning and he would have gone to this lifestyle anyway." She goes on to say that Mr. Russell probably doesn't even know himself why he went down such a dark path. Indeed.I moved on from night stocking, moved on from Seattle to find an area with more sun. Maybe it was all the rain that made Mr. Russell turn out bad? That's a common theory about all of the serial killers from Seattle, and I will admit, the gray skies can easily get you down. Would he have turned his life around if he had moved to sunny San Diego as he had planned, just before luckily he was arrested? Probably not. I'll agree with his ex-roommate. And I'll also agree that a great book can come out of a horrible tragedy.
Absolutely incredible true crime story. Jack Olsen did it again with this book-it was very hard to put down. I have read other Jack Olsen books and this one was of the same fine caliber. The only regret I have was that I finished reading it too soon.
Jack Olsen was one of the great true crime writers and this is one of his better books. I've seen this story before on American Justice and other crime shows you don't really understand the true nature of this evil and manipulative creature until you read this book. He truly seems to have fooled almost everyone, including the courts. He never suffered much in the way of consequences from his very long rap sheet of minor crimes but you see how he developed slowly from a petty thief to an evil serial killer. Should be a wake up call for people who cuddle young people - their own or others - and teach them that their actions don't really have consequences.Outstanding book and highly recommended.
This is a good story. But could have been better with 1/3 less in between bull and all the typos and other errors. It was like tripping over sentences the entire book. Well actually I didn't read the whole thing...half way through I started skipping chapters and didn't miss a thing. Not Olsen's usual quality but then again you get what you pay for.
I love true crime books and serial killers are fascinating to me.When I 1st saw A& E's City Confidential's,"Sunny Days,Deadly Nights On Mercer Island",I became fascinated in George Russell.I bought "Charmer" and have read it twice.The late,great Jack Olsen does a great job of telling a story of a African American youth whose family moves to a mostly white area,who starts acting,and talking white in order to fit in,whose mother deserts him twice leaving him with his step father,and grows up with a rage that finally explodes with three murdered young ladies.George was unique in at least three ways,he was a African American serial killer,he "posed" his victims for shock effect to the persons or person who found the body and to leave a profane message"! He also killed girls he knew,most s.k.'s kill strangers.My only complaints of a truly great crime book were,no photos and the last chapter,The Epilogue,was about a un-named visitor who visited and interviewed George in the pen.Was the visitor Jack Olsen?? A must read for any true crime-serial killer fan !!!
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