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Murder at Dusk: How US soldier and smiling psychopath Eddie Leonski terrorised wartime Melbourne [Paperback / softback]

3.89/5 (70 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Format: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, height x width x depth: 234x154x30 mm, weight: 460 g
  • Pub. Date: 26-Jun-2018
  • Publisher: Hachette Australia
  • ISBN-10: 0733640451
  • ISBN-13: 9780733640452
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  • Price: 23,04 €
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, height x width x depth: 234x154x30 mm, weight: 460 g
  • Pub. Date: 26-Jun-2018
  • Publisher: Hachette Australia
  • ISBN-10: 0733640451
  • ISBN-13: 9780733640452
Other books in subject:
Far away from any World War II battlefront, the citizens of Melbourne lived in fear of a serial killer - the Brownout Strangler.

May 1942: Melbourne was torn between fearing Japanese invasion and revelling in the carnival atmosphere brought by the influx of 15,000 cashed-up American servicemen. But those US forces didn't guarantee safety. Not long after their arrival, the city would be gripped by panic when the body of a woman was found strangled, partially naked and brutally beaten. Six days later another woman was found dead and her body told the same horrific story. A murderer was stalking the streets.

As women were warned not to travel alone, an intense manhunt ensued. Not long after a third woman was murdered, American soldier Eddie Leonski was arrested. A calculating psychopath, he had a twisted fascination with female voices, especially when they were singing . . . Acclaimed author Ian W. Shaw brings World War II Melbourne to life, and takes us into the mind of the Brownout Strangler, and a very different kind of terror.

'enthralling . . . makes for a fascinating read.' Canberra Times on Ian W. Shaw's The Rag Tag Fleet

Reviews

Fast paced and rich in historical detail, this book is a pageturner for war and law buffs alike. * Law Society Journal * Review * Shepparton News * Shaw vividly paints a picture of fear and suspicion in Melbourne at this time. * Daily Telegraph, Sydney * ...an interesting study of toxic masculinity in the shape of a ''classic'' murder story. * Spectrum * Review + Giveaway * Queensland Times *

Map Inner Melbourne, 1942
viii
Prologue 2 a.m., 3 May 1942, Albert Park, Melbourne xi
1 He's Coming South!
1(15)
2 Private Leonski
16(12)
3 Camp Pell
28(17)
4 Mrs Ivy Violet McLeod
45(17)
5 Sid McGuffie, Detective
62(14)
6 Mrs Pauline Buchan Thompson
76(19)
7 The Brownout Strangler
95(18)
8 Anthony `Joey' Gallo
113(13)
9 Miss Gladys Lillian Hosking
126(25)
10 A Mud-Bespattered Body
151(15)
11 The Right to Remain Silent
166(25)
12 Without Fear of Punishment or Hope of Reward
191(16)
13 The Uniform Code of Military Justice
207(16)
14 The Medical Board
223(14)
15 Evidence-in-Chief
237(15)
16 For the Defence
252(11)
17 Killing Time
263(14)
18 Death at Dawn
277(12)
Postscript Schofield Barracks Post Cemetery, Honolulu 289(15)
A Note on Sources 304(3)
Endnotes 307(11)
Bibliography 318(2)
Acknowledgements 320
Ian W. Shaw is the author of six books: The Bloodbath, On Radji Beach, Glenrowan, The Ghosts of Roebuck Bay, The Rag Tag Fleet and Murder at Dusk. The Bloodbath was nominated for a Victorian Premier's Literary Award and was shortlisted in the Local History category. Ian is a graduate of the University of Melbourne and holds postgraduate degrees from Monash University and the University of Michigan. After ten years as a secondary school teacher, Ian worked in the Commonwealth public service and private enterprise for three decades, and is an expert on security issues. He lives in Canberra.