FROM SOCIAL OUTCAST TO NECROPHILE AND MURDERER -- HIS APPALLING CRIMES
STUNNED AN ERA.
San Francisco, the 1920s. In an age when nightmares were relegated
to the fiction of Edgar Allan Poe and distant tales of the Whitechapel
murders, a real-life monster terrorized America. His acts of butchery
have proved him one of history's fiercest madmen.
As an infant, Earle Leonard Nelson possessed the power to unsettle his
elders. As a child he was unnaturally obsessed with the Bible; before he
reached puberty, he had an insatiable, aberrant sex drive. By his teens,
even Earle's own family had reason to fear him. But no one in the
bone-chilling winter of 1926 could have predicted that his degeneracy
would erupt in a sixteen-month frenzy of savage rape, barbaric murder,
and unimaginable defilement -- deeds that would become the hallmarks of
one of the most notorious fiends of the twentieth century, whose
blood-lust would not be equaled until the likes of Henry Lee Lucas, John
Wayne Gacy, and Jeffrey Dahmer.
Drawing on the "gruesome, awesome, compelling reporting" (Ann Rule) that
is his trademark, Harold Schechter takes a dark journey into the mind of
an unrepentant sadist -- and brilliantly lays bare the myth of innocence
that shrouded a bygone era.