An iconic police investigator on the hunt for a grisly murderer. Put that on a double bill. I’ll go make the popcorn.” –Patton Oswalt, The New York Times
“Mr. Stashower spins a seamless narrative of the grisly crime wave filled with vivid detail.” –The Wall Street Journal
“Stashower provides shrewd analysis and paints each scene with vivid, macabre details. You’ll sweat reading it.” –The Washington Post
“Hang on for the ride…[American Demon] places you right on the scene, describing the ghastly horrors of [America's] Jack the Ripper while also recounting how crime fighter Eliot Ness started piecing the investigation together, one puzzle piece at a time.” Forbes
"American Demon, beyond its contributions to the genre of American crime non-fiction, humanizes Ness and provides an honest portrayal of a complex man and the true stories that have cemented his place in history." —Fulbright Chronicles
“Annals of true crime rarely are as good as American Demon…No spoilers here, but only our strong recommendation: American Demon is worth seeking out and reading to reach your own conclusions.” AirMail
“The combination of a baffling unsolved crime with a nuanced portrayal of an American icon adds up to another winner for this talented author.” –Publishers Weekly (starred)
“[Stashower] deftly sets Ness’ battles against institutional antagonists against an engagingly told, suspenseful account of the search for a notorious killer…riveting and illuminating.” –Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“This account is a gripping true-crime thriller that paints a picture of Ness that’s significantly different from the version we’ve seen in The Untouchables…True-crime fans will want this one on their TBR lists.” Booklist
“[Stashower’s] personal connection to the city breathes life into the well-researched and chilling account.” –Library Journal
“Stashower's portrait of Ness is layered and he vividly re-creates a broken system.” –Minneapolis Star Tribune
“For historical crime, Stashower is unparalleled.”—Akron Beacon Journal
“A jaunty, fast-moving true-crime adventure.” –The Columbus Dispatch
“Nicely crafted, the book will appeal to hard-core Ness fans and true-crime freaks.” –New York Journal of Books
“Edgar Award-winner Stashower (The Hour of Peril: The Secret Plot to Murder Lincoln Before the Civil War) approaches this material with a pit bull's tenacity, and he writes with the steeliness of an old-school journalist, suiting the book's place and time… a thrillingly bedeviling true crime story interlaced with a nuanced character studynot of the criminal but of his flawed pursuer.” –Shelf Awareness
“Daniel Stashower has a gift for peering into the dark, shadowy corners of American history and unearthing its most chilling and fascinating tales. American Demon is a twisting, true-life murder mystery about a serial killer who terrified a nation in the throes of the Great Depression—and his nemesis, famed lawman Eliot Ness, who was battling demons of his own. Stashower deftly fuses meticulous research with nail-biting storytelling to give this narrative history all the thrills of the best crime fiction.” Abbott Kahler, New York Times bestselling author (as Karen Abbott) of The Ghosts of Eden Park
"The legendary Eliot Ness on the trail of a diabolical serial killera Hannibal Lecter running loose at the height of the Great Depression. And it’s all true. When it comes to historical crime nonfiction, Stashower is untouchable.” Harlan Coben, New York Times bestselling author of Win
“Dan Stashower brings both the novelist's pen and the historian's eye to throw new light on one of history's most baffling cold cases.” –Donna Andrews, New York Times bestselling author of Murder Most Fowl
“Iconic lawman Eliot Ness is well known for his first act: helping to bust Al Capone, together with his intrepid band of Untouchables. With American Demon, Daniel Stashower takes a deep and fascinating dive into Ness’s even more intriguing second act: as Depression era safety commissioner of Cleveland, where he battled rampant corruption and led the hunt for a bizarre and baffling serial killer. Bringing the character and times to vivid life, Stashower once again makes an important contribution to the annals of American crime.” —Mark Olshaker, coauthor of Mindhunter, The Cases That Haunt Us, and The Killer Across the Table
“American Demon is a swirl of today's obsessions in a story of our yesterdays. The book has it all: Serial killers. American hero cops. Media frenzies. Politics. Romance. And it's all character-driven by the real life legendary figure of Eliot Ness from TV and book fame on the track of a monster. American Demon goes beyond a fascinating true crime story to a suspenseful revelation of our American realities.” James Grady, creator of Condor and author of This Train
★ 07/04/2022
Edgar winner Stashower (The Hour of Peril: The Secret Plot to Murder Lincoln Before the Civil War) provides the definitive look at the case of Cleveland’s Torso Killer, who claimed at least 12 victims in the 1930s. The killings happened on the watch of Eliot Ness (1903–1957), who became the city’s director of public safety in 1935 after his much vaunted, and exaggerated, role in bringing Chicago gangster Al Capone to justice. The killer’s victims seemed to have been randomly selected, and their dismembered remains were left in a poor neighborhood with a large vagrant population. Ness’s failure to catch the killer was devastating to his career and reputation. Stashower presents a warts-and-all portrait of Ness, who achieved some success in combating corruption in Cleveland but was unfaithful to his wife and less than fully engaged in the hunt for the Torso Killer. Despite that, Stashower manages to engender empathy for Ness, who was out of his depth dealing with a kind of murderer law enforcement in general was ill-equipped to handle, and who died at 54 after being reduced to working in a bookstore to earn some money. The combination of a baffling unsolved crime with a nuanced portrayal of an American icon adds up to another winner for this talented author. Agent: Susanna Einstein, Einstein Literary Management. (Sept.)
06/10/2024
Edgar-, Agatha-, and Anthony Award-winning Stashower (Teller of Tales) digs into the history of Cleveland to uncover the details of Eliot Ness's work for the city. In 1935, Ness, the well-known Prohibition agent and leader of Chicago's "The Untouchables," began work as Cleveland's safety director, having been hired away from government work by Mayor Harold Burton. His assignment: eliminate graft, implement police reform, and improve traffic safety. While in Cleveland, Ness found himself peripherally working on the chilling case of the local serial killer known as "the Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run." Will Damron performs a meticulous, exact narration of Stashower's work. He unpacks the background and history of the places and players with the calm and collected authority of an insider, yet exudes the excitement, confusion, and fear of outsiders when delivering numerous gruesome passages about the 13 dismembered murder victims. The disdain that Ness held for the occupants of the depressed shanty neighborhood is evident when Damron chillingly repeats his words, "Burn it down!" VERDICT Armchair detectives will enjoy this carefully narrated deep dive into a grisly serial crime.—Stephanie Bange
07/01/2022
Stashower (Teller of Tales) traces Eliot Ness's career with a focus on the media-named Torso Murders, which shook the city of Cleveland. Over a course of three years, citizens discovered bundles of dismembered body parts. Twelve killings in all were ascribed to the unknown assailant, dubbed the Mad Butcher, and only two victims were positively identified. Ness was famous for his work in Al Capone's downfall. After some less prestigious work shutting down moonshine stills in the mountains, Ness landed a job that played to his strengths: Cleveland's safety director. Here he could modernize the police force, use his gang busting skills against the city's organized crime, and ferret out corruption within the ranks. Cleveland needed this, but what the city wanted was a hero who could stop the Mad Butcher. Stashower's Ness is a flawed do-gooder, frustrated by city politics, sullied by personal indiscretions, and taunted by postcards from the man he suspected was the Mad Butcher but couldn't prove. VERDICT Stashower was born in Cleveland, and his personal connection to the city breathes life into this well-researched and chilling account.—Terry Bosky
★ 2022-07-02
How a serial killer flummoxed one of America’s most celebrated law enforcement officers.
In his latest true-crime thriller, bestselling popular historian Stashower turns his attention to the so-called “Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run,” aka the “Cleveland Torso Murderer,” a still-unidentified maniac seemingly responsible for a dozen or more murders in Depression-era Cleveland. The author’s focus falls on the investigative role played by Eliot Ness, who was named the city’s safety director after his success in Chicago as the charismatic leader of a mob-busting brigade. Stashower begins with a summary of Ness’ exploits in helping to apprehend Al Capone, then moves on to examine his extraordinary influence in Cleveland as a police reformer and his response, over several years, to the sensation created by a series of grisly murders targeting the homeless. With characteristic skill, the author documents Ness’ involvement in the case and, more broadly, his work combatting systemic corruption as he manipulated newspaper coverage and marshalled political support. Though he did not crack the case of the titular “American demon,” Ness was, as Stashower makes clear, undeniably heroic in confronting injustice. “Ness made a particular specialty of taking down crooked precinct captains,” writes the author, “an effort he likened to cutting off the head of a snake. The campaign climaxed with the shocking downfall of…a captain said to be so powerful that ‘nobody went to the bathroom’ without his permission.” The author deftly sets Ness’ battles against institutional antagonists against an engagingly told, suspenseful account of the search for a notorious killer. Stashower is particularly incisive in his explorations of Ness’ lapses as an investigator and his portrait of the crime fighter’s personal and professional decline. Rather than a simple idealization of Ness’ often uncanny efficiency, we get a nuanced text about a deeply principled and exceptionally accomplished—though all-too-human—reformer.
A riveting and illuminating account of an iconic figure’s involvement in a notorious murder investigation.