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This novel is about a character that started her career as a policewoman and at a certain time in her life things change drastically. Her thinking becomes deadly as she transforms into the opposite of what she’s been in her life. Two men who make her life a living hell torment her and the police can’t seem to stop them no matter what they try. Her desire to confront these two men grows until she is given that chance. This former policewoman has developed a new career in which she can fulfill her wildest dreams while making her country safer.
Acclaimed crime historian, podcaster, and author of American Sherlock Kate Winkler Dawson tells the thrilling story of Edward Rulloff—a serial murderer who was called “too intelligent to be killed”—and the array of 19th century investigators who were convinced his brain held the key to finally understanding the criminal mind. Edward Rulloff was a brilliant yet utterly amoral murderer—some have called him a “Victorian-era Hannibal Lecter”—whose crimes spanned decades and whose victims were chosen out of revenge, out of envy, and sometimes out of necessity. From his humble beginnings in upstate New York to the dazzling salons and social life he established in New York City, at every turn Rulloff used his intelligence and regal bearing to evade detection and avoid punishment. He could talk his way out of any crime...until one day, Rulloff's luck ran out. By 1871 Rulloff sat chained in his cell—a psychopath holding court while curious 19th-century "mindhunters" tried to understand what made him tick. From alienists (early psychiatrists who tried to analyze the source of his madness) to neurologists (who wanted to dissect his brain) to phrenologists (who analyzed the bumps on his head to determine his character), each one thought he held the key to understanding the essential question: is evil born or made? Eventually, Rulloff’s brain would be placed in a jar at Cornell University as the prize specimen of their anatomy collection...where it still sits today, slowly moldering in a dusty jar. But his story—and its implications for the emerging field of criminal psychology—were just beginning. Expanded from season one of her hit podcast on the Exactly Right network (7 million downloads and growing), in All That Is Wicked Kate Winkler Dawson draws on hundreds of source materials and never-before-shared historical documents to present one of the first glimpses into the mind of a serial killer—a century before the term was coined—through the scientists whose work would come to influence criminal justice for decades to come.
"The Wiles of the Wicked" is a thrilling undercover agent book that takes you through the dangerous hallways of mystery operations and right into a global where lies, political intrigue, and evil schemes all come together. The story takes readers via a complicated net of lies, spying, and strength performs, displaying how unstable the balance is between trust and betrayal. As the characters go on a dangerous ride with a lot at stake, they have to cope with the shadowy world of hidden plans and the sneaky tricks of people who are motivated with the aid of greed and terrible intentions. Author William Le Queux is a grasp of suspense and spy fiction. He skillfully creates a story that draws readers into an international wherein each circulate is deliberate, alliances are fragile, and characters' real intentions are always unknown. The book tells a tale of intrigue and suspense this is fueled by way of the worry of espionage and the manipulative plans of its characters. It suggests a global wherein secrets and techniques are foreign money and the road between properly and awful is blurred inside the complicated dance of electricity.
This book is a projection of the Future, Artificial Intelligence is saturated throughout the plot, as is climate change and its impact on the environment. This book is a sequel to the last of the Soul searchers, and projects the main character ten years after he was placed in a mental hospital for being an alleged serial Killer. Shaun is released as a test subject, after a Neura link Chip was placed in his brain. This chip will hopefully control his dissociative personality disorder but is this another Anunnaki conspiracy to use a mentally unbalanced person as a scapegoat of murders committed by the Anunnaki Assassin known as the phantom? A detective from Brownsville Ky teams up with a special agent from the FBI to investigate murders in casinos in Vegas, the mountains of North Carolina, and on a cruise ship headed for the Bahamas. As both men use technology of the future to solve these assassinations, there are unrelated murders of pedophiles near the Mammoth Cave area. Are there two serial killers working in tandem, or is it just modern technology serving up its horrifying consequences?
Three years have passed since the devastation of Golyna. Anna, once the maker of immortals, continues to fight the evil she unwillingly created through her rune-carving magic. Secreted away in an isolated mountain monastery, she works as a teacher to young scribes, guiding them toward runes that foster peace rather than endless war. So when the tracker who murdered her brother comes to Anna’s redoubt, begging for his eternal runes to be undone, Anna agrees to grant his wish on one condition—that he aid her in rooting out the remnants of Volna, a genocidal regime bent on destruction. In this brave new world where old foes can become allies, so too can former friends sour into deadly enemies. With the tracker’s help, Anna is propelled into a confrontation with Ramyi, her former apprentice. Grown bitter and disillusioned, Ramyi now wants to lay waste to the world—but not before she completes an apocalyptic ritual that could have dire consequences for all of existence. To stop Ramyi from unleashing chaos, and restore peace to a broken world, Anna must be willing to make the ultimate sacrifice.
Conspiracy theories are inevitable in complex human societies. And while they have always been with us, their ubiquity in our political discourse is nearly unprecedented. Their salience has increased for a variety of reasons including the increasing access to information among ordinary people, a pervasive sense of powerlessness among those same people, and a widespread distrust of elites. Working in combination, these factors and many other factors are now propelling conspiracy theories into our public sphere on a vast scale. In recent years, scholars have begun to study this genuinely important phenomenon in a concerted way. In Conspiracy Theories and the People Who Believe Them, Joseph E. Uscinski has gathered forty top researchers on the topic to provide both the foundational tools and the evidence to better understand conspiracy theories in the United States and around the world. Each chapter is informed by three core questions: Why do so many people believe in conspiracy theories? What are the effects of such theories when they take hold in the public? What can or should be done about the phenomenon? Combining systematic analysis and cutting-edge empirical research, this volume will help us better understand an extremely important, yet relatively neglected, phenomenon.