Paul Collins is the author of nine books. A Professor and Chair of English at Portland State University, Collins is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the founding editor of the Collins Library imprint of McSweeney's Books. His work has appeared in Slate, New Scientist, and the New York Times, and he is regularly featured on NPR's Weekend Edition as their "literary detective."
“Lively, immediate and dishy in the style of a top-notch tabloid
columnist…fizzes with the energy and irreverence of an infant
republic…Collins provides a saucy breakdown of the twisty and
interlocking interests behind Weeks’ case. This is New York
politics in all its gritty glory.” —Salon
“In Paul Collins's gripping, true-life courtroom drama, Aaron Burr
and Alexander Hamilton form the ultimate team of rivals.”
—Parade
“Collins not only skillfully squeezes the maximum juice out the
combined history and mystery of his story, but may even have solved
the crime.” —Christian Science Monitor
“[Collins] paints a rich portrait of post-Revolutionary Manhattan,
a muddy little burg wracked by fever and drink, where everyone knew
everyone...[A] deft narrative.” —Los Angeles Times
“Collins is a vividly evocative writer who conjures up the
atmosphere and emotions of a bygone day...Masterful.” —Washington
Times
“In Collins's hands, historic figures stand up and live on the
page...A rollicking read.” —Oregnonian
“This is more than an account of an old case; it is an absorbing
legal thriller...This is a cold case that has suddenly become quite
hot.” —Larry Cox, King Features
“NPR's "literary detective" once again applies his skills as a
historian to a now obscure crime that was a cause celebre in its
day…Using the court transcript as a primary source, Collins makes
the most of the inherent drama of the case, and goes one step
further to unearth convincing proof of the identity of the real
killer.”
—Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
“This tautly constructed narrative, infused with period atmosphere,
holds the reader’s attention…Collins delivers fine true-crime
verisimilitude.”
—Booklist
“The author’s New York is a fascinating place [and] once the trial
begins, the narrative truly takes off, as Collins reveals the
immense talents of the three attorneys…A rousing tale of the
longest murder trial to that date in Manhattan…the author’s
conjecture as to the true villain is spot-on.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Duel with the Devil begins as a wonderfully creepy historical
murder mystery and becomes a riveting story of two acclaimed
lawyers battling for justice in an unsympathetic courtroom. But, in
the talented hands of author Paul Collins, it also becomes
something more—a startlingly insightful look at early American
history and the men who helped shape a young country. The book
delivers on so many levels that you'll find yourself, as I did,
reading it more than once.”
—Deborah Blum, author of The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the
Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York
“A nimble and vividly evocative reconstruction of a long-forgotten
New York murder mystery with an unforgettable cast of characters.
Duel with the Devil is a fascinating book that unfolds like an
early-American episode of Law & Order, with Alexander Hamilton and
Aaron Burr as the celebrity guest stars.”
—Gary Krist, author of City of Scoundrels
Praise for THE MURDER OF THE CENTURY
"Revealing but also enormously entertaining...Collins has a clear
eye, a good sense of telling detail, and a fine narrative ability."
—Wall Street Journal
"Collins has mined enough newspaper clippings and other archives to
artfully re-create the era, the crime, and the newspaper wars it
touched off....A riveting account." —New York Times
"Collins...brings considerable talent to the project. He has an eye
for the wacky relics of the era....In the end, Collins has crafted
a book that won't disappoint readers in search of a book like Erik
Larson's DEVIL IN THE WHITE CITY. THE MURDER OF THE CENTURY is
entertaining." —Washington Post
"Simply a fantastic, factual yarn, and a reminder that abhorrent
violence is nothing new under the sun." —Oregonian
"One of the most exciting true crime books of the summer... simply
put, this is crime reporting at its very best." —King Features
Weekly Syndicate
"A wonderful reminder that we have often been just as we are: fools
for spectacle, short of memory, cheered by the invigorating shock
of the immoral." —Willamette Week
"Wonderfully rich in period detail, salacious facts about the case,
and infectious wonder at the chutzpah and inventiveness displayed
by Pulitzer's and Hearst's minions. Both a gripping true-crime
narrative and an astonishing portrait of fin de siècle yellow
journalism." —Kirkus Reviews
"No writer better articulates our interest in the confluence
of hope, eccentricity, and the timelessness of the bold and strange
than Paul Collins." —Dave Eggers
"Paul Collins's account of the headless torso murder that led to an
all-out newspaper war and then a dramatic trial has all the
timeless elements of a great yarn--a baffling mystery, intriguing
suspects, and flawed detectives. It's compelling history that's
also great page-turning entertainment." —Howard Blum, author of THE
FLOOR OF HEAVEN and AMERICAN LIGHTNING
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