Calvin Trillin has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1963. His nonfiction includes Jackson, 1964; About Alice; and Remembering Denny. His humor writing includes books of political verse, comic novels, books on eating, and, most recently, a children’s poetry collection illustrated by Roz Chast, No Fair! No Fair!
“Riveting tales of murder and mayhem. . . . [Calvin] Trillin is a
superb writer, with a magical ability to turn even the most mundane
detail into spellbinding wonder. Armed with this wealth of
material, he utterly shines. Every piece here is a gem.”—The
Seattle Times
“What Mr. Trillin does so well, what makes Killings literature, is
the way he pictures the lives that were interrupted by the murders.
Even the most ordinary life makes a terrible noise . . . when it’s
broken off.”—Anatole Broyard, The New York Times
“Fascinating, troubling . . . In each of these stories is the basis
of a Dostoevskian novel.”—Edward Abbey, Chicago Sun-Times
“The stories . . . are unforgettable. They leave us, finally, with
the awareness of the unknowable opacity of the human heart.”—Bruce
Colman, San Francisco Chronicle
“[Trillin] writes brilliantly. . . . These stories still hold up,
as classics.”—The Buffalo News
“In his artful ability to conjure up a whole life and a whole
world, Trillin comes as close to achieving the power of a Chekhov
short story as can anyone whose material is so implacably tied to
fact.”—Frederick Iseman, Harper’s Bazaar
“I have a book for you true-crime addicts if you’re caught up on
the podcast Serial, the cascade on TV of 48 Hours and Dateline NBC
episodes, the hundreds of hours of Law and Order and its various
offspring—oh, and the nearly eight-hour O.J.: Made in America and
the ten or so hours of Making a Murderer. It’s time to pick up
Calvin Trillin’s Killings.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Trillin’s subjects are diverse and poignant. Each story captures
not only a physical setting but also the tone of the era in which
it occurred. Well-crafted and thoughtfully composed, lacking
judgment and admonishment, these are a true piece of quality
journalism, which clearly continues to captivate
audiences.”—Library Journal
“Violent deaths illuminate complex lives and desperate
circumstances in this expanded reissue of the classic collection of
the author’s true-crime reporting. . . . With telling detail and
shrewd insights, [Calvin Trillin] masterfully evokes the places and
personalities that hatched these grim episodes.”—Publishers Weekly
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