Murder by the Drop
Interdisciplinary Review of General, Forensic, Prison and Military Psychiatry and Psychology and the related subjects of Behavior and Law with the occasional notes and comments by Michael Novakhov, M.D. (Mike Nova).
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Book Review - 'The Poisoner’s Handbook - Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York,' by Deborah Blum - Review - NYTimes.com
Book Review - 'The Poisoner’s Handbook - Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York,' by Deborah Blum - Review - NYTimes.com
Murder by the Drop
At the beginning of Deborah Blum’s “Poisoner’s Handbook,” a murderer named Frederic Mors gets off virtually scot-free after confessing to multiple killings by poison, then disappears without a trace. Though Blum leaves the reader with the impression that Mors — whose adopted surname means “death” in Latin — will return, she never comes back to his story. But death moves throughout her latest book via myriad poisons administered by impatient heirs, unhappy spouses and psychopaths — or innocently ingested, because the science of forensic toxicology has not yet caught up with these deadly chemicals.
Murder by the Drop
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