Caleb and Kendra are back for round 2. The competition will do much more to win. And the Centurions expect a lot more skin.
The Killing Game: The True Story of Rodney Alcala the Game Show Serial kIller
β Scribed by Warren, Alan R.
- Book ID
- 110505636
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 614 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ASIN
- B077GS9YNS
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Beginning in 1968 and continuing into the 1970s, a predator stalked California and New York, torturing, raping and murdering young girls and women. But who was the monster behind these tragedies? Eventually, a suspect emerged, but he didnβt look like a monster. Indeed, Rodney Alcala was a handsome, charming photographer whoβd once studied film at New York University under director Roman Polanski. With his wit and easy self-confidence and humor, heβd even been selected as the βwinnerβ on the popular television show βThe Dating Game.β But his real game was much more sinister. In 2010, Alcala was convicted of murdering five women in California during the 1970s; then in 2013, as he waited on Death Row, he confessed to the murder of two more in New York. Yet, that might not be the end of the nightmare he caused. At his arrest, police found his βportfolioβ with thousands of nude and erotic photographs of women and boys, who may also be among his victims. In βTHE KILLING GAME,β bestselling true crime author and radio show host, Alan R. Warren reveals the shocking details of Alcalaβs brutal crimes, as well as the trials and appeals that stretched on for decades and may still not be over.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Caleb and Kendra are back for round 2. The competition will do much more to win. And the Centurions expect a lot more skin.
Caleb and Kendra are back for round 2. The competition will do much more to win. And the Centurions expect a lot more skin.
In the summer of 1993, James Wood brought terror to the unassuming town of Pocatello, Idaho. Little did the friendly community realize it had opened its arms to serial killer. Wood, the stranger in town, was polite and soft-spoken. He looked quite ordinaryοΏ½he was a master at appearing normal. In lat