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The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes

The Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $12.21
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Easy to understand yet very interesting to the knowledgable.
Review: This a great book if you don't know a lot about forensics. It really explains everything that you may not understand. Yet it is very interesting to read how forensic different crimes. I think that this book would be suitable for anybody interested in forensic no matter how much they know on subject.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A simple and well written book for starters
Review: This book can be easily comprehended. Cases are segmented into specific investigations. Excellent piece of material for new readers to understand the basics of forensic science. Old and new cases are well presented.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Well written, interesting, and thorough.
Review: This book covers the major groupings of modern Forensic criminalistics in a practical way. Using specific cases to show how the science started, developed, and continues to see perpetraters caught AND convicted. It also contained backround on some of the original forensic scientists and how they helped shape the field. It kept me interested, and was written in practical rather than text book english.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great history of science and medicine in the courts
Review: This book is a fantastic survey of the use of science and medicine to catch the bad guys and set the innocent free. The book does not go into tremendous detail about criminiology or its techniques. But the history is amazing; how DNA has been used in cracking cases and the like. It is a quick read that will both fascinate and educate!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A good clearly set out book
Review: This book is clearly set out into 15 chapters. Each case is very well set out. And annyone who is intrested in forensic this is a must.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is an awesome book!
Review: This book was really, really great. It's such that you can read it over and over. I really like it because if one story doesn't particularly interest you (barely any in here!), it'll be over in a few pages and you can get onto the next one. It's awesome. I LOVE forensics, and it's often way cooler to study when IT REALLY HAPPENED- in your world, perhaps even in your lifetime. If you like forensics and collections of short stories, then this is the PERFECT book for you. Buy it; you won't be sorry!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Great Place to Start Forensics
Review: This books shows Forensics being used, not just the this is how you do it, but here it is in practice. It is a good and very easy to read book with superb array of graphics and photos to help provide understanding of the fundamentals of forensics.

A must for any True Crime Buff (and CSI fan)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very good book on subject
Review: This is a fascinating book if you can put up with a murder every few pages, knowing that these murders took place in real life.
The author weaves information about the history of each method of detection in with the details of each crime -- kind of like Crichton's book "Five Patients." The author is occasionally given to a little bit of hyperbole, but it's an excellent read for anyone interested in forensics.
Here's one of the stories: It's about a woman who planted cyanide-laced Excedrin in various stores, to cover up the fact that she used cyanide-laced Excedrin to kill her husband. The twist is that when her husband died, the doctor mistakenly recorded the cause as emphysema, not poison. Because of the mistaken diagnosis of the cause of her husband's death, the widow/ murderer would only have gotten $31,000 insurance, instead of the $176,000 insurance she would have gotten if his death was accidental poisoning. She wanted the extra money badly enough that not only did she call the doctor several times to ask him if he could have been mistaken, but she called the police to ask if her husband's death could be related to a local cyanide/Excedrin death (caused by her planted Excedrin in a drug store causing an innocent death).
Investigating as she requested, not only did the police prove that her husband was poisoned, but the police proved that she was the one who did the poisoning, earning her a 90-year prison sentence.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Casebook for Forensic Science & Law
Review: This is an ideal book for a student of forensic science or law, who may need help to find out various cases for their studies. It gives a guide to many different cases throughout the last century, with enough detail for the student to be able to do further research.

Each new section has a brief review of what the subject matter is eg Ballistics. Colin tells a little of what ballistics is about, including some history, then he writes a little about the subject of firearms and then what can happen when firearms are fired. Other subjects covered are Cause of Death, Disputed Documents, DNA Typing, Explosives and Fire, Fingerprinting, Forensic Anthropology, Odontology, Psychological Profiling, Identification of Remains, Serology, Time of Death, Toxicology, Trace Evidence and Voiceprints.

The appendix in the book is on Forensic Pioneers and Their Cases and here Colin lists 9 forensic scientists giving their year of birth and if dead, their year of death, also a brief outline of their career or some other pertinent detail, with a list of the significant cases which they worked on.

This book is well written and with enough detail to give those who are not involved in this field a very enjoyable read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding general history of forensics and reference book
Review: This is the perfect starter book for anyone interested in forensics. It is organized by forensic discipline, then chronologically within each section. The author covers a number of famous cases, but has also included many more that are obscure, but equally fascinating. Each case is described ecomonically, but there is enough detail given to fully describe the case and the forensic techniques used to solve it. The writing is plain, precise, and jargon-free.

This book is also an excellent reference volume. The index and table of contents make it easy to find a specific case and I refer to this book often while reading other true crime or forensics book for names, dates, etc.

Anyone looking for a well-written, informative forensic science book need go no further than this book.


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