Torso: The Story of Eliot Ness and the Search for a Psychopathic Killer

by Steven Nickel

86 Members 1 Review ½ (3.50)

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Ness follows up his Untouchables fame with a search for America's first serial killer in Cleveland, Ohio

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1 review
Don't you hate it when you come to town as safety director and a pesky serial killer keeps overshadowing your actual accomplishments with decapitations and grizzly dismemberments?

I don't mean to sound terribly flip, but this is largely the theme of Steven Nickel's Torso which is supposed to be an account of Eliot Ness's search for the Cleveland Torso Murderer. In the end, it tends to serve more as what could have been Ness's planned second memoirs, with a way to bury the more negative aspects of his eventual downfall while distancing Ness from the Torso killings by stressing Ness's accomplishments as Cleveland's safety director. Clearly, Nickel was a Ness fan who felt that the man deserved better than the overblown Untouchables, but show more also didn't want him to be embarrassed by events that may have been out of his control...even if it was his job to control the uncontrollable.

Not that there isn't plenty of information to mine in Nickel's book when it comes to the Torso murders. Each of the victims is given book time and are given brief biographies, even though so few of them were ever identified by name. He gives a lot of credit and time to Detective Peter Merylo, a man that logged countless hours tracking down the origins of every scrap of evidence as far back as it could go whether it was a fraternity pin, a quilt or even a cardboard box found at the scene. These sections are some of the best passages of the book.

Nickel is not strictly a fan with blinders. There are moments where he clearly doesn't agree with Ness's methods...of course, they'll be buffered with passages on Ness's methods that improved Cleveland's way of life. In this way, Torso can be dragged down at times in a way that is similar to listening to a friend recount all the ways they would have changed everything for the better were it not for all of these things that keep happening to them that they can't control.
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½

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Torso: The Story of Eliot Ness and the Search for a Psychopathic Killer
Original publication date
1989
People/Characters
Eliot Ness; Peter Merylo; Dr. Samuel Gerber; Harold Burton; Cleveland Torso Murderer (Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run)
Important places
Cleveland, Ohio, USA (Kingsbury Run); Ohio, USA; Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Youngstown, Ohio, USA; Mahoning County, Ohio, USA
Important events
Cleveland Torso Murders
First words
This is a story about a crime in Cleveland, Ohio from the fall of 1935 to the spring of 1942. (Introduction)
On September 22, 1935, the Seventh National Eucharist Congress opened in Cleveland.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)In that respect, at least, good has managed to triumph over evil.

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, History, Politics and Government, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
364.1Social sciencesSocial problems and social servicesCriminologyCriminal offenses
LCC
HV6534 .C55 .N53Social sciencesSocial pathology. Social and public welfare. CriminologySocial pathology. Social and public welfare.CriminologyCrimes and offenses

Statistics

Members
86
Popularity
369,804
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.50)
Languages
English, Hungarian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
4