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Killings

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
True stories of sudden death in the classic collection by a master of American journalism
“Reporters love murders,” Calvin Trillin writes in the introduction to Killings. “In a pinch, what the lawyers call ‘wrongful death’ will do, particularly if it’s sudden.” Killings, first published in 1984 and expanded for this edition, shows Trillin to be such a reporter, drawn time after time to tales of sudden death. But Trillin is attracted less by violence or police procedure than by the way the fabric of people’s lives is suddenly exposed when someone comes to an untimely end.  As Trillin says, Killings is “more about how Americans live than about how some of them die.”
These stories, which originally appeared in The New Yorker between 1969 and 2010, are vivid portraits of lives cut short. An upstanding farmer in Iowa finds himself drastically changed by a woman he meets in a cocktail lounge. An eccentric old man in Eastern Kentucky is enraged by the presence of a documentary filmmaker. Two women move to a bucolic Virginia county to find peace, only to end up at war over a shared road. Mexican American families in California hand down a feud from generation to generation. A high-living criminal-defense lawyer in Miami acquires any number of enemies capable of killing him. 
Stark and compassionate, deeply observed and beautifully written, Killings is “that rarity, reportage as art” (William Geist, The New York Times Book Review).
Praise for Killings
“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. . . . It’s time to pick up Calvin Trillin’s Killings.”The New York Times Book Review

“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

“With telling detail and shrewd insights, [Calvin Trillin] masterfully evokes the places and personalities that hatched these grim...
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Regular readers of Calvin Trillin's essays in The New Yorker know that he doesn't write about people who live the kind of lives that lead to murder in order to disparage them. In Trillin's telling, the oddball in Iowa or the trailer-park tenant in Tennessee takes on a dignity that transcends his circumstances. In Barrett Whitener's narration, that dignity is lost. He describes the characters, most of whom live in small towns and have endured more than their share of bad luck and bad decision-making, in a clipped, judgmental tone. These essays, part of The New Yorker's U.S. Journal series from the 70's, are not typical murder tales in that they tell us more about the nuances of individual lives in particular times and places than about gore and mayhem. It's too bad the narrator can't appreciate those nuances. T.F. (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 13, 2017
      Violent deaths illuminate complex lives and desperate circumstances in this expanded reissue of the classic collection of the author’s true-crime reporting for the New Yorker. Journalist Trillin (Jackson, 1964) prowls America’s small towns and county courthouses and finds homicide sagas that are both emblematic and enigmatic: a noirish sex-and-hired-murder scandal erupts in a wholesome Kansas church; two Mexican-American clans fight a bloody generations-long feud; a cocktail waitress is the catalyst for an Iowa farm family’s self-destruction; a bankrupt farmer squares off against a SWAT team while blaming Mossad for his problems; a little girl is brutalized to death by her stepfather; a Michigan man makes a statement about his failed life by opening fire on a group of teenagers; an Iowa man ends up dead for no clear reason beside booze, cussedness, and a handy shotgun. The killers’ motives for bloodshed are many—lust, revenge, honor, madness, self-defense, property disputes, constitutional rights, insurance money—and Trillin also fills in the social backdrop that nudges individuals towards violence, examining poverty, collapsing farm economies, the clash of conservatives and the counterculture, and the rise of drug gangs. Trillin’s relaxed reportage is sympathetic to everyone yet tinged with subtle irony; with telling detail and shrewd insights, he masterfully evokes the places and personalities that hatched these grim episodes.

    • Library Journal

      September 15, 2017

      Such a simple title for such a fascinating recounting of the many ways that people have been killed. Trillin tells us early on that these stories, originally written as columns for The New Yorker magazine, were selected for inclusion because they revealed great insight into particular places throughout our country. From a cameraman in eastern Kentucky to feuding neighbors in Virginia to a church secretary's husband in Iowa, the stories reveal lives cut short for reasons that seem clear in hindsight. Killings is, as Trillin says, "more about how Americans live than about how some of them die." The 11 hours of superb narration by Robert Fass pass quickly, but listeners should savor each story as it is relayed. Trillin's work proves that stories of "wrongful death" are timeless and always fascinating. VERDICT Highly recommended for medium and large libraries and small libraries with a true crime readership. ["Well-crafted and thoughtfully composed, lacking judgment and admonishment, these are a true piece of quality journalism": LJ 3/15/17 review of the Random hc.]--Gretchen Pruett, New Braunfels P.L., TX

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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