
James R. Smith (1) (1947–)
Author of San Francisco's Lost Landmarks
For other authors named James R. Smith, see the disambiguation page.
Works by James R. Smith
The California Snatch Racket: Kidnappings During the Prohibition and Depression Eras (2010) 12 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Smith, James Robert
- Birthdate
- 1947
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
The California Snatch Racket: Kidnappings During the Prohibition and Depression Eras by James R. Smith
What a fascinating book! Kidnappings were quite the fad through Prohibition and the Depression. The Lindbergh baby case is the most well known out of the east coast, but kidnappings--and sadly, subsequent murders--were quite a California thing throughout the era. Smith and Roger's created a well-written and researched book that breaks the incidents into easy-to-read true crime stories with photographs and other documentation included. The incidents gravitated around Los Angeles and the Bay show more Area, though my native Central California gets mentioned quite a bit, too.
One would think that the targets of these crimes would all be wealthy and/or famous, but no. Not always. Some of the cases are pretty disturbing. If you're triggered by things happening to kids (one horrible case involves a mutilated young girl) or by photographs of bodies (the book starts off with a case wherein the accused are lynched by a mob of citizens), then this isn't a book for you. One strange case has a kind of reverse Stockholm syndrome--the crooks came to adore their victim and after being busted, were praising her to everyone who would listen. show less
One would think that the targets of these crimes would all be wealthy and/or famous, but no. Not always. Some of the cases are pretty disturbing. If you're triggered by things happening to kids (one horrible case involves a mutilated young girl) or by photographs of bodies (the book starts off with a case wherein the accused are lynched by a mob of citizens), then this isn't a book for you. One strange case has a kind of reverse Stockholm syndrome--the crooks came to adore their victim and after being busted, were praising her to everyone who would listen. show less
Statistics
- Works
- 3
- Members
- 95
- Popularity
- #197,645
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 11
