David Southwell
Author of 1001 Ridiculous Ways to Die
About the Author
Series
Works by David Southwell
The History of Organized Crime: The True Story and Secrets of Global Gangland (2006) 40 copies, 1 review
The Kennedy Assassination: The Truth Behind the Conspiracy that Killed the President (2012) 7 copies
The Kennedy Conspiracy File, An investigation into the assassination and its cover up by David Southwell, True Crime Book (2003) 3 copies
Embarrassing Ways to Die: The Ultimate Collection of 1001 Daft and Undignified Ways You Can Exit the Stage of Life (2017) 3 copies
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
The world's greatest conspiracy theories are reviewed, rehashed, and regurgitated - all rather weakly. Oh, there's plenty to go through in this book from JFK's assassination to Roswell to Elvis to secret societies, and so on. It's just that there's not much substance to any of the information in the 1-3 pages that the authors spend dissecting each of the various theories. Kind of like looking at that big bag of potato chips when you're really hungry, scarfing half of the bag down, and then show more coming away feeling really empty. Oddly (or maybe not), in about half of the stories, the "suspects" behind the conspiracies seem to be either Freemasons, aliens, the CIA, the US military, or the Mafia.
Move along: not much to see here. show less
Move along: not much to see here. show less
Conspiracy Theories: The Facts and the Evidence Behind the World's Greatest Cover-Ups by David Southwell
I really enjoyed this book. The authors have researched a vast number of conspiracies and I like the way the book is laid out; giving an overview of the conspiracy, followed by lists of suspects and facts, before looking at the case from a skeptical angle.
The only issue that I found when reading through was the bias the authors showed towards believing/disbelieving certain conspiracies which coloured the way in which the information was presented. I would have preferred a slightly more show more impersonal write-up but overall this didn’t detract from my enjoyment of the book. I know I will dip back into this book over the coming days to re-read some of the theories mentioned here. show less
The only issue that I found when reading through was the bias the authors showed towards believing/disbelieving certain conspiracies which coloured the way in which the information was presented. I would have preferred a slightly more show more impersonal write-up but overall this didn’t detract from my enjoyment of the book. I know I will dip back into this book over the coming days to re-read some of the theories mentioned here. show less
1001 ridiculous ways to die : the largest ever collection of hilarious true stories chronicling the most ridiculous, bizarre and astonishingly stupid deaths by David Southwell
I can't help observing that lately Australians have been dying in very odd ways.
There is the girl who died scuba diving in Queensland. Her American husband had evidently been planning this for some time. He'd been hassling her about getting a life insurance policy and so most recently, knowing she hadn't but wanting to say whatever would get him off her case, she said yes she had. And so he murdered her in a way will never happen to me. Honestly, take note now. If I am ever found dead scuba show more diving I have been murdered. Please investigate. He is in gaol in Australia but is being extradited to the US, one hopes to a worse gaol term than he got here.
Last week Australian twins were at a shooting range in the US and fell out of their booth simultaneously with gun shots to the head. It turned out to be a suicide pact but one of them took better aim than the other. Because they were identical the authorities couldn't even tell which one was dead. Eventually the one that shot badly came to consciousness in hospital. She is pretty irritated at how things have turned out. The girls were in their late twenties and to all intents and purposes normal, whatever that means. Evidently they had a particular interest in the Columbine massacre.
Zarah, the poor sweet thing. Her mother gave her up early to her husband. Then it was discovered she had serious cancer which resulted in deafness and an artifical leg. Her father met an American woman on the internet, took Zarah with him to take up life with this woman in the US. The step-mother has, I gather, chopped Zarah up into pieces and then pretended to police via a fake ransom note that she was kidnapped. At least the others were old enough to know what they were doing and have some control over their lives. Doesn't your heart go out to Zarah, though? A horrible life followed by a horrible death.
I wonder if it is just coincidence that there is an American connection to all these things? show less
There is the girl who died scuba diving in Queensland. Her American husband had evidently been planning this for some time. He'd been hassling her about getting a life insurance policy and so most recently, knowing she hadn't but wanting to say whatever would get him off her case, she said yes she had. And so he murdered her in a way will never happen to me. Honestly, take note now. If I am ever found dead scuba show more diving I have been murdered. Please investigate. He is in gaol in Australia but is being extradited to the US, one hopes to a worse gaol term than he got here.
Last week Australian twins were at a shooting range in the US and fell out of their booth simultaneously with gun shots to the head. It turned out to be a suicide pact but one of them took better aim than the other. Because they were identical the authorities couldn't even tell which one was dead. Eventually the one that shot badly came to consciousness in hospital. She is pretty irritated at how things have turned out. The girls were in their late twenties and to all intents and purposes normal, whatever that means. Evidently they had a particular interest in the Columbine massacre.
Zarah, the poor sweet thing. Her mother gave her up early to her husband. Then it was discovered she had serious cancer which resulted in deafness and an artifical leg. Her father met an American woman on the internet, took Zarah with him to take up life with this woman in the US. The step-mother has, I gather, chopped Zarah up into pieces and then pretended to police via a fake ransom note that she was kidnapped. At least the others were old enough to know what they were doing and have some control over their lives. Doesn't your heart go out to Zarah, though? A horrible life followed by a horrible death.
I wonder if it is just coincidence that there is an American connection to all these things? show less
Belongs on the same shelf as Tim Powers, a good thing. Does not feature an alcoholic white male protagonist with father issues, also a good thing. Sudden ending that sets up a sequel, but this actually is appropriate within the context of the story.
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Statistics
- Works
- 31
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 303
- Popularity
- #77,623
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
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