August 15, 2018

These Are The Side Effects Of Researching (Famous) Female Homicides

“You feel like you’re committing some nameless secondary crime, reducing a human’s full life to the brief, gory tale of its end.”

Story By: Maria Hummel

These Are The Side Effects Of Researching (Famous) Female Homicides

“You feel like you’re committing some nameless secondary crime, reducing a human’s full life to the brief, gory tale of its end.” Story By: Maria Hummel

TRIGGER WARNING: This article contains information about sexual assault and violence which may be triggering to survivors.

Our August book pick, Still Lives, explores how society treats violence against women. While writing the novel, author Maria Hummel spent a great deal of time researching the lives and deaths of female victims—and this didn’t come without side effects. Here, she talks about her experience reading and writing about famous* female homicides.

Embedded Image

1. First, her photo lodges in your mind. Most of the time she is smiling, posed, with an almost pin-up prettiness, though sometimes the pictures are candid and sweet, as in Laci Peterson, pregnant in her shiny red dress and Christmas-ornament necklace.

2. You sicken at the stats of her murder, the investigation, the trial (if there’s a trial), the outcome. Sometimes you go down a long rabbit hole with the investigation, if there are false leads, liars, or multiple victims of the same killer.

3. Stabbed women and savage men appear in your dreams, and you wonder why you chose this topic because it is making you suspicious all the time.

4. You feel like you’re committing some nameless secondary crime, reducing a human’s full life to the brief, gory tale of its end. You realize that you—like everyone else—find it so easy to make the murderer the story’s automatic protagonist, and not her.

5. So you dig up what you can about her biography. It’s remarkably hard to find. Most peddlers of true crime are interested most in the homicides, and their readers are, too. Take the murderer Harvey Glatman, a.k.a., the Glamor Girl Slayer, and his young L.A. victim, Judy Ann Dull. A few clicks lead you to pictures of Judy Ann Dull tied up clothed, then naked, gagged, and trussed to an X of wood, her head hanging. Alongside the pictures run the excruciating accounts of Glatman driving Dull out to the desert and raping and killing her. The text mentions her age: nineteen.

6. It takes you more research to discover that Judy Ann Dull was a mother, in an expensive custody battle for her daughter, and she needed the $20 that Glatman had promised her in exchange for a gig posing for the cover of a pulp novel.

7. As you ponder this situation, you realize that Dull not only required money, she required discretion. No way could Dull’s estranged husband find out about her tawdry photo shoot. No way could she show up to court scratched or bruised, which made running away from the increasingly creepy Glatman hard for her to do.

8. In short: Motherhood was at stake in every decision that Judy Ann Dull made that day.

9. That Dull’s choices as a mother ended her life is something you arrive at late, long past the images of her beauty and her torture, and the dark, festering fear that human beings can be so evil, and killers are out there right now, looking for victims.

10. Dull’s daughter’s was named Susan or Suzanne. She was fourteen months old. You know that Susan would have been too young when her mother died to consciously remember her, except for some deep vestigial sense of being held, and held no more, not as long as she lived.

*By “famous,” I mean that the victim is widely known because of her death. She is also most likely beautiful, white, cisgender, abducted or raped or violently dismembered, and though the murderers range from strangers to husbands, 99% are men.

Your dream (digital) library has arrived! 📚✨ #AdobeAcrobatPartner

In partnership with the new @AdobeAcrobat Studio, we’ve created a one-stop PDF Space designed just for Reese’s Book Club to make it easier (and more fun) to discover and share the books you love.

Inside the Reese's Book Club Companion PDF Space, you’ll find:

📚 Custom collections filled with our monthly picks and themed reads
🍷 Hosting guides for planning unforgettable book club nights
💡 Mood-based recs so you always find the right book for your vibe
There's nothing like when a book meets you exactly where you are ✨

In honor of her brand-new memoir I Shouldn’t Be Telling You This: (But I’m Going to Anyway), @ChelseaDevantez sits down with @DanielleRobay and @BoomBoomHiller on Bookmarked, the Reese's Book Club podcast. They spill on the highs and cringe-worthy lows of celebrity memoirs, the mystery of twin flames, and the ever-elusive Bechdel test.

To learn why there is power behind telling your own story (with plenty of laughs along the way), start listening on the @iHeartPodcast app, Apple Books, or wherever you love to listen! 🎧
The City of Night Birds is TRULY a work of art. So many perfect lines in here that will sit with us for a while! ✨

Each page hits straight to the heart, with themes of ambition and love coming alive through @Juhea_Writes' writing.

What recent reads have made you feel everything all at once?
A little reminder that we are all capable! ✏️✨

Wonder what aspects of The Phoenix Pencil Company were imagined during the LitUp process? LitUp Fellow @AllisonKingWrites chats with her mentor and Reese's Book Club author @AdrienneYoungBooks about the courage to start writing in the most recent episode of Bookmarked, the Reese's Book Club podcast.

New to LitUp? It's the Reese's Book Club writer's fellowship, for unpublished diverse women and nonbinary individuals. Hear about the fellowship and how it helped Allison as a writer on the @iHeartPodcast app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you love to listen. 💙🎧
"The growth of the characters, especially Eve, was beautiful to witness. They reminded me that relationships take time and work, and healing is never linear." ✨

We're so touched by the meaningful takeaways from Once Upon a Time in Dollywood. What inspired you about Eve's story?

📷+💬: @readwithtee
Did you know that Heiress Takes All takes place all within 24 hours? That's also how long it took us to finish this page-turner. 📖💙
Who better to bring a book to life than the author herself? ✨ Listen to a line from Once Upon a Time in Dollywood narrated by @ashleyjordanwrites, and pick up a copy at our link in bio to discover the rest of the story.
"Living in the area that this book takes place made for such a FUN reading experience!"

Spectacular Things takes place in Victory, Maine, a nod to Liz's aspirations for her daughters and a perfect setting for a polar plunge. Is there a book set in your favorite place? 💙📍

📷+💬: @dariasbooked
We’re still not over Hattie Morahan’s incredible narration of the Broken Country audiobook. It’s time for a revisit. 💙
"She made her first attempt at outlining her next play, settling on the working title Down From Dover, based on a Dolly Parton song. Seemed fitting for the setting."

We love the little bit of Dolly weaved throughout Eve's story. 🦋✨ Drop your favorite Dolly Parton song in the comments below!

📷: @JacobRivsan