Used price: $0.29
Collectible price: $3.69
Used price: $0.90
Collectible price: $5.04
Buy one from zShops for: $2.50
A MUST READ.
The real heroes of this book are Marcus' parents, Harold (Red) and Gwen Allen, who put the necessary time and effort into providing their children with the integrity that has made Marcus successful.
This is a book of contrasts and conflicts, the first of which are with Al Davis, owner of the Oakland Raiders. Marcus despises Al and is candid in describing his reasons. Anyone who is not familiar with Al Davis might think Marcus is exaggerating, but those who are familiar with him will find the criticism reasonable, if not understated. Corroboration for his descriptions of Al's eccentricities may be found in "Slick: The Silver and Black Life of Al Davis" by Mark Ribowsky [ISBN: 0-02-602500-0], a highly entertaining biography that is now out of print but may be available through a used-book service.
The other interesting contrast is that between Marcus and his friend O.J. Simpson. As Marcus described Nicole Simpson's death and the subsequent murder trial, I kept asking how these two men, similar in so many ways, could have ended up so differently. As I said at the outset, the real heroes of the book are Marcus' parents.
Used price: $1.95
Collectible price: $3.18
Buy one from zShops for: $8.95
Used price: $89.17
Used price: $0.85
Collectible price: $4.00
Buy one from zShops for: $4.00
Used price: $1.69
Collectible price: $4.75
I hope that police departments will consider thinking things through more to prevent this kind of thing from happening again. Is busting a couple of pot smokers really worth the life of a young policeman? I hardly think so and I wonder if George's parents think so. There is one dedicated young man with a brillant future ahead of him, dead and two others, that may have ended up there anyway, rotting in prison cells, and this to accomplish what? What else came of this "sting"? I find it sad that so much innocence was lost for no comparable benefit.
heart of ice cold brass. The others in the story are a bunch
of accidents waiting to happen, and Joy is the woman who
makes it possible for them. She's a user of [people] - a femme fatale who thought nothing of having a woman disposed of because the woman [angried] Joy (royally).
I kind of envy her last days, spent in a villa in the south of France. I mean, whatever you want to say about her, she
refused to give up the throne to the last drop of her sorry, free life.
Frankly, I am glad this person is in prison. She ruined the lives of the countless drones who did her bidding, and a great number of completely innocent victims, too...like her very nice young son, who, it was intimated, was killed doing an errand for Joy that may or may not have had sinister overtones.
Frankly , I did not think this a superior true crime book, ...This one just plods
on. It could have been more imaginatively written. But I did read to the end...to find out the really good stuff...which was how they finally snagged adulterated Joy.
reviewed by mbmlaw
List price: $24.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $3.90
Collectible price: $7.93
Buy one from zShops for: $5.25
Used price: $1.74
Used price: $0.97
Collectible price: $3.98
Buy one from zShops for: $4.00
What I consider most compelling about Sins of the Son is the writer, Carlton Stowers himself. Carlton's son, Anson, began showing signs of anti-social behavior from a very early age. Gradually, Anson's criminal behavior escalated to more serious crimes as his drug addiction and aggression grew. And every step of the way, dear old Dad is there at the ready, to bail him out, fostering in Anson the belief that personal accountability was something other people had to worry about, not Anson.
For example, when Anson steals Carlton's car, and takes it out to Louisiana and uses it in an armed robbery, what does Carlton do? He flies out and hires him a lawyer. When the boy escapes the Louisiana prison and returns to Texas, Carlton expresses in his book the hope he felt that Anson might be able work out a deal with Texas authorities to serve out his Louisiana time at home in Texas, where Anson might be more comfortable. To his relief, that's just what happened.
After doing just a few years in Texas for the armed robbery charge, Carlton writes in his book of the frustration he felt when his miscreant son did not make parole the very first time up. He even contacts a well-connected Dallas businessman who ends up somehow securing the boy's release. Hello? Your son stole your car and used it when he stuck a loaded shotgun in a woman's face while he robbed her!
Out on parole, Carlton tells us about how he opens his home to Anson, and, ironically, pays for a car for him to use so he can get back and forth to his parole officer's weekly visits. Shortly after that, Anson begins using drugs again. He then ends up moving out and into his girlfriend's apartment. After this point, Carlton makes only the slightest reference in his book to the fact that his drug-addicted son had become physically abusive to his girlfriend, who, against her better judgment, marries him anyway.
The entire book is filled with, "Dad, I'm in a jam, I need some money," or "Dad, can you help me out," or "Dad, I really need a hand, can you spare a few bucks?" Each and every time, the writer maddens his reader by telling of his caving in to his wife-beating son's requests for money, even though the writer confesses he knows much of the money he is handing out is going to pay for drugs!
But nowhere is Carlton's compulsive obsession with his son more evident than when he discusses Anson's wife, whose photo does not appear in the book and whose family is never mentioned even once. He knows his son is physically abusive, beating up his wife, and yet he does nothing. When the inevitable happens and his son finally murders Annette, Daddy Carlton faithfully visits the prison and pays no homage in his book, nothing, to the family of the young woman whose life was snuffed out by his son. Carlton rues the fact that his son was sentenced to sixty years and laments that he won't be eligible for parole until the age of 45. Perhaps the writer ought to be reminded how fortunate it is that he has the opportunity to even reach that age at all. It sure is more than what one can say for his son's victim.
The interesting thing is, this book has been heralded as some kind of "courageous" piece, an "inspiring," and "brave" work. Nonsense. This is the work of cowardly and frankly self-absorbed individual who lacked the courage to admit that his own flesh and blood was a sociopath, a homicidal drug addict whose only rightful place is on death row. Because of the writer's shameless pattern of bailing his son out no matter what he's done, facilitating his freedom to commit the ultimate crime, murder, it's an exceedingly maddening book to read, and an unbalanced and poorly written one at that. I would not recommend this book.
How did this normal child turn to a life of crime, drugs, and eventually murder?
This is an excellent book. It addresses the issue of a child's misbehavior from the point of a father, a journalist, and an award-winning true crime writer. He deals with the issues of his son honestly and openly, as only the person experiencing the crisis can. However, he fails to examine his own problems. Since the title is "Sins of the Son," I suppose he did not feel that the sins of the father would be pertinent. Personally, I feel that the father is as much at fault as the son.
Carlton Stowers is the author of To The Last Breath and Careless Whispers. He has won the Edgar Award twice.