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Murder In Brentwood
Zebra
$6.99



If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer
Beaufort Books
$14.95



A Season in Purgatory
Ballantine Books
$7.50



Justice: Crimes, Trials, and Punishments
Three Rivers Press
$14.95



A Simple Act of Murder: November 22, 1963
Harper Paperbacks
$14.95



Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and Detective's Twenty-Year Search for Justice
$16.95


  
Murder in Greenwich: Who Killed Martha Moxley?
by Mark Fuhrman

List Price: $7.99
Unavailable for
purchase at this time

Mass Market Paperback
Publisher: Avon
Dominick Dunne

In this powerful new book, expert investigator Mark Fuhrman, the controversial former LAPD homicide detective and author of the national bestseller Murder in Brentwood, uncovers explosive new information as he analyses the still unsolved murder of fifteen-year-old Martha Moxley, who was bludgeoned with a golf club on the grounds of her family's exclusive Greenwich, Connecticut, estate on October 30, 1975.

Read the book that spawned the Connecticut Grand Jury Investigation.

On the night before Halloween in 1975, 15-year-old Martha Moxley was bludgeoned to death with a golf club in front of her home in the ultra-upper-class Belle Haven district of Greenwich, Connecticut. Though many suspects were brought forth, to this day no one has ever been arrested for the crime and no trial has taken place. Notorious former detective-turned-author Mark Fuhrman attempts to shed light on the Moxley case in a book that summarizes the fruits of his new investigation.

Among Fuhrman's controversial opinions is his conclusion that the killer is Moxley's neighbor Michael Skakel, a nephew of Ethel Kennedy and at the time the same age as Martha Moxley. Some townspeople have long suspected Michael's older brother Thomas of performing the deed, but Fuhrman argues that only Michael had both the opportunity and the temperament to commit such a crime.

Readers familiar with Fuhrman's role in the O.J. Simpson trial, or his subsequent book about that case, Murder in Brentwood, will not be surprised to find him hitting his familiar themes: the abuse of wealth and power, the arrogance of the high and mighty, and the vanity of celebrity. Otherwise, this is very much a hard-hitting detective work. Fuhrman's spare prose drives the book toward an inevitable conclusion with a moral or two in tow. --Tjames Madison


Customer Reviews:
 
PAGE TURNER
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
This book was a great read! I started reading and couldn't stop until it was finished. Mark Fuhrman is a top notch author, he really constructed an excellent book here.

Be careful not to do too much research about the Moxley case before reading this book, it may ruin the ending for you.

Repeats facts alot.
Customer Rating: 3 out of 5 
This is an okay book. Furman repeats alot of the info over and over. I didn't even finish the last few pages as they started out the same as everything we already read.

Tori Sorianos review!!
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
My book is called Murder In Greenwich and it is about a murder of a 15 year old girl named Martha Moxley.The book is written by Mark Fuhrman.The case was never solved but i think its an excellent book because it gave alot of details.It also show pictures of where the murder occurred and also of Martha Moxley.The author is also an excellent writer.I recommend this book if u like Mark Fuhrman books or mystery books!I would not recommend this book to people that dont like murders or blood. ~~~~BY TORI SORIANO 16 YEARS OLD LINCOLN CITY OR!!!~~~

Don't Read
Customer Rating: 2 out of 5 
The problem with this book is that Heir Furhman takes the credit for solving the crime. This couldn't be further from the truth.

If you want to read the most factual account of this murder, read "Conviction" by Len Levitt.

However, I believe that if Mr. Skakel can't recall if he committed the murder, how can anyone else be so sure.

Can we believe Mark Fuhrman?
Customer Rating: 2 out of 5 
Let's face it, Mark Fuhrman is not somebody that I consider reliable. Dominick Dunne, another old man bent on revenge over his daughter's murder, goes after the Kennedy family. Okay, I'm not saying that Michael Skakel did it or not because he was convicted of the crime but the story's not over until the case was done in the court of law. I believe the book came well before the guilty verdict which was too soon and judgmental. Yes, the Kennedys have a lot of power and money but Greenwich is still a place where people drive expensive cars, live in mansions, and are completely out of touch with reality. I don't believe Fuhrman anymore than I believe Dunne because they're totally ready to convict based on little evidence, hearsay, and gossip.




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