Joseph K. Loughlin is a former assistant chief of police for
the city of Portland, Maine. He served as the interim chief and
retired from service in January 2010 after 30 years of police work.
He has the historic distinction of achieving and serving in every
single sworn rank within the Portland Police Department. Loughlin
is a graduate of the FBI National Academy command training program
in Quantico, Virginia. He holds a master’s degree from the
University of Southern Maine and was acknowledged as a
distinguished alumnus. Loughlin is the author of Finding Amy, a
nonfiction account of the Amy St. Laurent homicide case in 2001. He
has authored multiple editorials and magazine articles on the
realities of police work.
Kate Clark Flora is the author of 14 mystery and true
crime books. Death Dealer, her most recent true crime, was an
Agatha and Anthony finalist. And Grant You Peace, a Joe Burgess
police procedural, won the 2015 Maine Literary Award for Crime
Fiction. Her other titles include the Thea Kozak mysteries and the
starred-review Joe Burgess police series. Flora is a founding
member of the New England Crime Bake conference and a founder of
Level Best Books, where she worked as an editor and publisher for
seven years, and has served as the international president of
Sisters in Crime. In an earlier life she was an attorney,
protecting battered kids and chasing deadbeat dads for the Maine
attorney general's office, and representing the Maine Human Rights
Commission. Flora teaches writing at Grub Street in Boston.
"Loughlin's recorded entries about the case -- his thoughts,
emotions and reactions to the investigation -- amplify Flora's
straightforward but potent narrative as detectives search for the
grave, find it (about halfway through the book) and build a case
against a leading suspect. This is a feast for proceduralists,
giving countless small details of the work-a-day slogging involved,
an effort that leads the department to make good on the mystery,
catching Amy's murderer, and making the case stick."--Publishers
Weekly
"Readers of true crime will find this chronological tale of the
search for Amy and her killer especially compelling because of the
personal account of Loughlin, who was lieutenant of the Criminal
Investigation Department when Amy disappeared. Loughlin's journal,
woven into Flora's painstaking recreation of the work of the
detectives, highlights the intense discussions that took place
among the key players and gives readers a look at the slow, steady
progress of real detectives on a real case. There are no 'CSI
solutions' that wrap up the case in a conveniently short time.
There are no magic findings of DNA. What takes place in this true
story is the passionate belief that they will find Amy, bring her
killer to justice, and give closure to her family and to the people
of Maine." --Foreword
"This is one of the best true crime stories to be published in
recent years...This book should reaffirm the public's faith in the
police, prosecutors, and Maine's judicial system."--Brunswick Times
Record
"Few true crime books get behind the scenes and explain how
homicide detectives do their jobs the way Finding Amy
does."--Bangor Daily News
"The tale is brimming with insights about police procedure,
jurisdictional disputes, and politics. Over and over again, real
life trumps fiction. For instance, after a five-hour standoff, the
suspect surrenders one of his guns for a soda, the other for a
cigarette. Put that in a novel and no one would believe it . . .
The reader is never allowed to lose sight of the humanity of the
victim, a young girl who accepted a ride from the wrong guy, then
had the temerity to say no and mean it."--Boston Globe
"This one is a triumph and a joy -- no showy-made for TV-ness --
just the reality of the way crimes and those who do them should be
taken to account. This one is the real thing."--Courier Gazette,
Rockland, Maine
Ask a Question About this Product More... |