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Late in 2004, Maggie Nelson was looking forward to the publication of her book Jane: A Murder , a narrative in verse about the life and death of her aunt, who had been murdered thirty-five years before. The case remained unsolved, but Jane was assumed to have been the victim of an infamous serial killer in Michigan in 1969. Then, one November afternoon, Nelson received a call from her mother, who announced that the case had been reopened; a new suspect would be arrested and tried on the basis of a DNA match. Over the months that followed, Nelson found herself attending the trial with her mother and reflecting anew on the aura of dread and fear that hung over her family and childhood--an aura that derived not only from the terrible facts of her aunt's murder but also from her own complicated journey through sisterhood, daughterhood, and girlhood. The Red Parts is a memoir, an account of a trial, and a provocative essay that interrogates the American obsession with violence and missing white women, and that scrupulously explores the nature of grief, justice, and empathy. Review: I like that God is present in the story and that ... - A stunning piece of writing . A powerful and deeply personal memoir that expound the grief of a family after a horrific act of violence. I like that God is present in the story and that the author doesn't sugar coat the horrific violence and how it effect not only the victim but those associated with the victim. There. Are a lot of chilling moments in this book told from a person that doesn't mince words. It is a fearless look at violence and its aftermath. This is a good read. Review: The Michigan Murders Revisited - In late 2004, a Michigan man whose only previous conviction was for a forged prescription was charged with the murder of woman who was thought to be a victim of serial killer John Norman Collins. Collins murder spree occurred in the late sixties. Almsot forty years later, old ghosts were dug up at a courthouse in Ann Arbor. The Red Parts is the story of Collins case revisited, but focuses on the one murder that never really fit with the rest. Jane Mixer was not raped. She was not stabbed or dumped in a secluded area. All of John Collins victims fit that M.O. She was shot in the head once to kill her, shot again in the head and then strangled. Her body was then dumped in The Denton Road Cemetery off of Michigan Avenue, four miles outside Ypsilanti. Author Maggie Nelson is the niece of Jane Mixer. She recalls as a child picking up a book called The Michigan Murders and looking for information on the aunt she never met. Years later, as an adult, she would go through her aunt's journals and discover what she was really like, no longer just the victim of a famous serial killer. This would lead to a book called Jane: A Murder, published in 2004. That same year, on the eve of it's publication she would get a phone call from an Ypsi detective saying "Your aunt's case is moving forward." After all this time, they had a suspect who was not John Norman Collins. The rest of the book is the personal story of Nelson's life around the time of the trial of Gary Leiterman, the man who eventually was convicted of her aunt's murder. It reminded me more of a book like Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar than a true crime book like The Michigan Murders. It's not just the facts, but more of a reflection on life, death, and justice. Nelson says she developed a "murder mind," an obsession with death and serial killers while researching Jane. The title has to do with the parts of the bible where Jesus spoke, which are often printed in red ink. When Nelson hears that term for the first time she immediately thinks of a disemboweled body, a symptom of her "murder mind." Overall the book is very well written and even if you have no interest in the case it's a good read. As I followed the case as it developed in 2004, it's especially interesting to read about it from an insider perspective. She describes the difficulty of seeing her aunt's autopsy photos with her family, as well as her relationship with the detectives, and Jane Mixer's college boyfriend. The death of Nelson's aunt affected her family not only for her mother's and grandparent's generation, but for her's as well, even though she wasn't even born when it occurred. The Michigan Murders happened forty years ago, and they still haunt Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor. If you have read The Michigan Murders, this book is probably as good a sequel and we can expect to get. It is perhaps the last twist of Michigan's most famous murder spree. The Mixer case itself is one of the most bizarre murder cases I have ever read about.
| Best Sellers Rank | #196,834 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #320 in Serial Killers True Accounts #3,555 in Memoirs (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 512 Reviews |
I**I
I like that God is present in the story and that ...
A stunning piece of writing . A powerful and deeply personal memoir that expound the grief of a family after a horrific act of violence. I like that God is present in the story and that the author doesn't sugar coat the horrific violence and how it effect not only the victim but those associated with the victim. There. Are a lot of chilling moments in this book told from a person that doesn't mince words. It is a fearless look at violence and its aftermath. This is a good read.
M**T
The Michigan Murders Revisited
In late 2004, a Michigan man whose only previous conviction was for a forged prescription was charged with the murder of woman who was thought to be a victim of serial killer John Norman Collins. Collins murder spree occurred in the late sixties. Almsot forty years later, old ghosts were dug up at a courthouse in Ann Arbor. The Red Parts is the story of Collins case revisited, but focuses on the one murder that never really fit with the rest. Jane Mixer was not raped. She was not stabbed or dumped in a secluded area. All of John Collins victims fit that M.O. She was shot in the head once to kill her, shot again in the head and then strangled. Her body was then dumped in The Denton Road Cemetery off of Michigan Avenue, four miles outside Ypsilanti. Author Maggie Nelson is the niece of Jane Mixer. She recalls as a child picking up a book called The Michigan Murders and looking for information on the aunt she never met. Years later, as an adult, she would go through her aunt's journals and discover what she was really like, no longer just the victim of a famous serial killer. This would lead to a book called Jane: A Murder, published in 2004. That same year, on the eve of it's publication she would get a phone call from an Ypsi detective saying "Your aunt's case is moving forward." After all this time, they had a suspect who was not John Norman Collins. The rest of the book is the personal story of Nelson's life around the time of the trial of Gary Leiterman, the man who eventually was convicted of her aunt's murder. It reminded me more of a book like Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar than a true crime book like The Michigan Murders. It's not just the facts, but more of a reflection on life, death, and justice. Nelson says she developed a "murder mind," an obsession with death and serial killers while researching Jane. The title has to do with the parts of the bible where Jesus spoke, which are often printed in red ink. When Nelson hears that term for the first time she immediately thinks of a disemboweled body, a symptom of her "murder mind." Overall the book is very well written and even if you have no interest in the case it's a good read. As I followed the case as it developed in 2004, it's especially interesting to read about it from an insider perspective. She describes the difficulty of seeing her aunt's autopsy photos with her family, as well as her relationship with the detectives, and Jane Mixer's college boyfriend. The death of Nelson's aunt affected her family not only for her mother's and grandparent's generation, but for her's as well, even though she wasn't even born when it occurred. The Michigan Murders happened forty years ago, and they still haunt Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor. If you have read The Michigan Murders, this book is probably as good a sequel and we can expect to get. It is perhaps the last twist of Michigan's most famous murder spree. The Mixer case itself is one of the most bizarre murder cases I have ever read about.
C**A
true crime drama
It's a mix of true crime, family memoir, and trial drama rolled into one. The author's aunt Jane, her mother's sister, was murdered and thought to have been the victim of a serial killer in Michigan, although her death was never officially tied to that series. Some 20+ years later the family gets a call from a detective informing them they are about to arrest a suspect who they believe is the perpetrator based on newly uncovered DNA evidence collected at the crime scene. The reopening of the case throws the surviving family members into the midst of renewed questions, grief, and pain. The author delves into it all including a somewhat fractured family past and other tragedies they lived through in the intervening years. They attend the trial of the new suspect and sit through some pretty unseemly evidentiary testimony and gruesome autopsy photographs. Through it all the author takes you on her personal struggles with grief, reconciling conflicting emotions about her relationships with her mother, father, step-father, and sister, and her attempt to honor the memory and life of her aunt, who was killed before she was born. Well done book. Different.
V**R
arrived on time
Book arrived on time but was disappointed in it. I assumed it was about the murder of the author's aunt but it was more a autobiography of the authors life which was not that interesting. Never finished the book and ended up giving it away
M**S
Original, ambitious, sensitive.
The Red Parts is, on top of everything, a very original book. Built on a family tragedy (the killing of the aunt of the author, before she was even born), the book has the backdrop of an improbable (but true) trial, trying to find the killer of Jane 36 years after the murder. With that, Maggie Nelson reflects on the long lasting impact some events have on a personal and family level, the transgenerational trauma and her own traumas derived from the hazards and challenges of her nuclear family life. The story is compelling, very well written, with a focus on the omnipresence of death and of view: she even describes photographs from the autopsy and the finding of the body, but refrains to show them in the book. As a reader, I was moved by Maggie Nelsonโs profound sensitivity and her โdefenseโ strategy: she shows feeling, but (to paraphrase Vivian Gornick), we know her through a transparent membrane: we can see, but we canโt touch. It seems as if even the deepest insight on oneโs past and present is always elusive.
S**N
What Goes Beyond a Trial
I read Jane: A Murder, before I read this. While it isn't absolutely necessary too, I believe you should! You are already immersed in the story when you learn the ending. While the story will never end for the family, a sense of closure is found in no longer wondering. Fabulous blend of past, present, poetry and journal entries.
B**H
Difficult, nuanced, excellent
This is not a true crime book in the general sense. It's a memoir of a woman dealing with the family trauma of a murder trial. The murder itself is far removed in time, the author never met the victim, who would have been her aunt. Still, it's gripping stuff. Incredibly well-written, moving, terrifying, lyrical. I'm glad I read it, and am not sure that any other book will be as satisfying for a while after this.
M**C
An engrossing, personalized approach to the true crime genre.
An engrossing, personalized approach to the true crime genre. The author's tireless and emotional search into the cold case murder of her aunt parallels a real police investigation, and the two stories cross over in a very interesting way (without giving away any plot here). I read this after reading her book "Jane", which predates this book, and I enjoyed first being introduced to Jane (the victim) through excerpts from her journals and the author's knowledge of her as a family member. Ms. Nelson also has such a disarming voice in how she relates facts and curiosity, that it's like reading the best of a memoir and investigative reporting.
I**E
Excellent, meditative piece
In 1969 Nelson's Aunt Jane was brutally murdered and little progress was made on the case. Then in 2004 Nelson's mother was told that a suspect was in custody. Nelson's book follows the case from this point through to the suspect's trial. Her book is not a dry or sensationalist true crime narrative rather it is a thoughtful, beautifully written set of meditations on the loss of her aunt, the impact on her family, grief and the ways in which the formal justice system can or cannot address these things. The more of Nelson's work I've read the more impressed by her I am, an excellent piece.
C**A
Interesting
This is a unique look at the attendance at a trial from a family member of a woman who was murdered 35 years earlier. Interesting read
K**R
Gorgeous
This book is sublime. I now need to read everything by Maggie Nelson. Poetic, unnerving, and very unique I highly recommend
A**R
NOT AS GOOD AS "JANE"
I much prefer Ms Nelson's JANE, her earlier book about her aunt Jane's murder. I was disappointed with The Red Parts as it is so intellectual and less about the heart. That said, Ms Nelson is a wonderful writer and I would recommend anything that she puts pen to.
F**S
excellent
i loved this book even though the subject matter was dark. partly it was because i identified so strongly with how her mind seemed to be processing the past and the present. if you are looking to read a straightforward true crime then this isnt for you. it has a very simular feel to "the fact of a body " in that its a multilayered inquiry into tragedy and how it resonates throughout the lives of the people involved within it. she captures so well how these things can unroot us from the ground we stand upon. my favourite quote reflecting this is "a dark crescent of land, where suffering is essentially meaningless, where the present collapses into the past without warning..............where grief lasts forever and its force never fades"
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