Authors: Andrew Klavan
“TIME FLIES WHEN YOU’RE HAVING FUN, WAITING TO DIE, OR READING
TRUE CRIME
, ANDREW KLAVAN’S NERVE-PLUCKING SUSPENSE NOVEL.”
—
The New York Times Book Review
HIGH PRAISE
FOR ANDREW KLAVAN’S “TOUR DE FORCE”*
TRUE CRIME
“A CLASSIC …
True Crime
moves like a tornado, its plot turning in tighter and tighter circles until it explodes in an ending that will leave readers exhausted.… His characters are vivid and compelling, his observations on the human condition perceptive, and his darkly humorous prose masterful.”
—
Houston Chronicle
“The most suspenseful and exciting novel I have read in the last couple of years. The adrenaline was flowing so strongly near the end, I actually thought my heart might give out. A wonderful, funny, heartbreaking, powerful book.”
—John Lescroart, author of
Guilt
“SIMULTANEOUSLY INTENSE AND FUNNY AND HARROWING, TEEMING WITH PRECISE AND MEMORABLE CHARACTER STUDIES, TOPPED OFF WITH A SURPRISE ENDING.”
—
Minneapolis Star-Tribune*
“THE NARRATIVE PLUNGES ON AT BREAKNECK SPEED … a literate, heartfelt, and suspenseful novel of the rough friction of life. I enjoyed the hell out of it.”
—
Newsday
“A PAGE-TURNING THRILLER … A suspense-filled story with vivid characters and a stunning portrayal of contemporary time and place.”
—
San Antonio Express-News
“BIG, SCARY FUN. Fill up the coffee pot and lock the doors before beginning.”
—Stephen King
“AN INGENIOUS, WICKEDLY COMIC, AND PAINFULLY SENSITIVE ROLLER COASTER … HAS YOU GASPING FOR AIR … [Klavan] does give you pockets of repose, with somber, heart-wrenching scenes on Death Row juxtaposed with Everett’s bumper-car race to the truth.”
—
West Coast Review of Books
“WARNING: Andrew Klavan has an astonishing gift: he can patch his characters into your spine. You’ll be reading this brilliant, riveting, dangerous novel, and suddenly you’ll find that Beachum’s Deathwatch cell has become your own, and there’s no way out of here, you’re not going anywhere until the hour of your own execution, until Klavan’s finished with you. So say your prayers before you open this book.”
—George Dawes Green, author of
The Juror
“A BREAKNECK ONE-DAY DEATH-ROW COUNTDOWN … [KLAVAN] INCINERATES IMPROBABILITIES WITH BRAVURA BRAVADO.”
—
Toronto Sun
“A TERRIFIC READ … Klavan is simply shameless in serving the suspense.… For that, and much else, we’d like to thank him.”
—
Daily News
“True Crime
gives the most compelling fictional tour yet of the last mile … readers won’t stop turning pages … Klavan presents with chilling precision and a gift for language the results of his research.”
—
People
“THE BEST THRILLER OF THIS YEAR … THE MOST INTRIGUING AND ARTFUL I HAVE EVER READ.”
—
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
“THIS IS ONE NOVEL YOU WON’T PUT DOWN UNTIL THE LAST TWIST HAS BEEN UNRAVELED AND THE LAST OH-SO-SATISFYING PAGE HAS BEEN TURNED.”
—Associated Press
“Life shuts down while you’re immersed in this book … it’s a keeper.”
—
Chattanooga Free Press
“I’ve admired Andrew Klavan’s work for years. But this book offers more suspense—and more surprises—than his other books put together! Readers always ask me which authors I find most chilling. After reading
True Crime
, Andrew Klavan is at the top of my list.”
—R.L. Stine
By the same author
AS ANDREW KLAVAN
Son of Man
Darling Clementine
Face of the Earth
Don’t Say a Word
The Animal Hour
Corruption
AS KEITH PETERSON
The Scarred Man
Rough Justice
The Rain
There Fell a Shadow
The Trapdoor
SCREENPLAY
A Shock to the System
Published by
Dell Publishing
a division of
Random House, Inc.
1540 Broadway
New York, New York 10036
All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 1995 by Amalgamated Metaphor, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law. For information address: Crown Publishers, Inc., 201 East 50th Street, New York, New York 10022. Member of the Crown Publishing Group.
The trademark Dell® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
eISBN: 978-0-307-79121-4
Reprinted by arrangement with Crown Publishers, Inc.
Published simultaneously in Canada
v3.1
This book is for Bob and Adrienne Hartman
“Good people are always so sure they’re right.”
Barbara Graham, on entering California’s gas chamber, where she was executed, some say unjustly, June 3, 1955. (Quoted in
Until You Are Dead: The Book of Executions
by Frederick Drimmer)
“I’ll tell you briefly what I think about newspapermen: the hand of God, reaching down into the mire, couldn’t elevate one of them to the depths of degradation.”
Nothing Sacred
. Screenplay by Ben Hecht.
T
his is not one of those modern works that mingle fact with fiction. All the events and conversations I’ve described here were either witnessed by me or reported to me by one or more of the participants. That said, the reader will quickly become aware that I have not restricted myself to the description of events and conversations alone. This story would not be complete without at least some reference—and sometimes a lot of references—to people’s inner thoughts, feelings and motives. And, where I’ve sought to describe such things, I confess a certain amount of deduction has necessarily come into play. That is, I’ve had to guess sometimes at what was going on in people’s heads.
The reason for this is obvious. Excluding maybe God, there’s only ever one witness to a person’s inner life. When that witness is not self-aware or is untrustworthy or is deceased, it becomes very difficult to get at the truth about his emotional world. So with the blind, the dishonest and the dead—and I encountered all three in researching this—I’ve recorded my own impressions. Sometimes I’ve made these deductions explicit, often I hoped the context made them so. In the end, the reader will have to measure the degree to which my understanding of individual human nature is biased or flawed.
All this, I should add, I take to be a serious breach of the rules of journalism. I’m a newspaperman, a day-to-day reporter.
My job, as I see it, is to record what I witness and what people tell me. I try to save my brilliant insights and perceptions for the barroom, where I can impress members of the opposite sex with my depth and sensitivity. But writing a book is different from writing a news story. A book ought to be about something. And wherever I’ve deviated from my usual methods of reporting—wherever I’ve played fast and loose with the literal truth—it had to do with what I think this book is about, and what it’s not about.
It is not, first of all, about the “issue” of capital punishment. My opinion on that—and on the concept of “issues” in general—is expressed early on in the text, so I won’t repeat it here. Suffice it to say, I leave the whole question to those writers who are done impressing the opposite sex and still have some brilliant insights left over.
Second of all, this book is not about the law. The legal ins and outs of the Frank Beachum case are well detailed in two books by the attorneys involved. Tim Weiss and Hubert Tryon’s
The Jaws of Death
gives a passionate description of the authors’ efforts for the defense. Prosecutor Walter Cartwright’s
The Thirteenth Juror
takes a different approach and attacks American journalism in general, and yours truly in particular, for using cheap emotionalism to distort the public’s view of the facts in an attempt to supplant the courts in their proper function. My personal feelings about Cartwright aside, I must admit he makes an excellent argument. In any event, all three of these authors know a lot more about the law than I do, and all three were much closer to that aspect of the story than I ever was.
Finally, and most important, this book is not a detailed examination of the murder of Amy Wilson. The series of articles I wrote for the
St. Louis News
and the piece I wrote for
The New Yorker
that was based on the
News
articles have pretty well exhausted me on those subjects. Nor will I attempt to refute the recent attacks on my “character” by
certain self-styled minority leaders and by columnists on both the religious right and the feminist left. I haven’t tried to hide my “character”—read what follows and I promise you’ll get a face full of it—but my many faults don’t change the facts of the case in the least.
So that’s what the book is not about. What is it about? It’s about Monday, July 17, of last year: one brutally hot day, and what happened on that day, the day Frank Beachum was rolled into the death chamber at Osage State Correctional Facility.
The reader might well ask why—when there are such important matters as capital punishment, the law and murder to discuss—why I would choose to tell such a simple story and a story—that of the last hours before a condemned man’s execution—that’s been told so many times before both in journalism and fiction. Well, partly it’s because it’s true and I was there and they paid me to do it. But also, on this day, in these hours, under these circumstances, I found myself an eyewitness to a remarkable confrontation between a number of people—their ideas, their theories, their feelings and perceptions—and an incontrovertible outward reality: Death, destroyer of worlds, jolly muncher of our philosophies. In a business—in a society—so overwhelmed with images and words, with pundits, spin-doctors, experts and jumped-up cultural interpreters of all persuasions, I find it important to remember that such an outward reality exists, that such confrontations do occur, and that even our best ideas, theories, perceptions and feelings may count for exactly nothing in the big old scheme of things.