The Literary Hatchet, Issue 31 (Correction)

The Literary Hatchet cover, Issue 31

The Literary Hatchet, Issue 31

(When I originally posted this on May 17, I misspelled George Kelly’s name. I have corrected it. Sorry, George.) 

The Literary Hatchet is an independent international journal devoted to emerging and established voices crafting provocative short fiction and thoughtful poetry and prose. Published three times a year! (Stefani Koorey, editor; Eugene Hosey, editor; Michael Brimbau, editor.)

Contributing writers and artists for Issue 31 include Aric Annear, Bruce Boston, Scott J. Couturier, Holly Day, Barbara Demarco-Barrett, George Freek, Matt Gleason, S. E. Greco, John Grey, Michael Lee Johnson, Gloria Keeley, George Kelly, Allen Kopp, Aurora Lewis, Christopher Locke, Fabiyas MV, Michelle R. Markuson, J. Marquez Jr, Denny Marshall, Corey Niles, R. L. Raymond, Emmett Ross, Rory C. Say, Michael Seeger, Mack Severns, Wayne Scheer, Judith Skillman, Doug Smith, Stuart Stromin, Ann Christine Tabaka, Bill Thomas, John Tustin, Jim Windolf, Todd Zack.

Available for purchase for $14 a copy at this link on Amazon:

Amazon.com

*****

(With the extreme modesty that is my nature, I have to admit that I have four short stories in Issue 31 of The Literary Hatchet: “The Errant Husband,” “Pneumonia,” “Blanche Barrow,” “Cherry Hill.”)

The Literary Hatchet, Issue 32

TLH cover, Issue 32

The Literary Hatchet, Issue 32

The Literary Hatchet is an independent international journal devoted to emerging and established voices crafting provocative short fiction and thoughtful poetry and prose. Published three times a year! (Stefani Koorey, editor; Eugene Hosey, editor; Michael Brimbau, editor.)

Contributing writers and artists for Issue 32 include: Jaya Abraham, Jon S. Bach, Barbara Demarco-Barrett, Mike Bemis, Warren Benedetto, Bruce Boston, Jarad T. Bushnell, Jay Caselberg, Scott J. Couturier, Nate Currier, George Freek, Eugene Hosey, Michael Lee Johnson, Gloria Keeley, Ngo Binh Anh Khoa, Tara Knight, Allen Kopp, Aurora Lewis, Christopher Locke, Denny Marshall, DS Maolalai, Mark Millicent, Fabiyas MV, James B. Nicola, Caitlyn Pace, Jaden Pierce, Marshall Pipkin, Trevor Price, Wayne Scheer, Emily Smith, John Sweet, Bill Thomas, John Tustin, Gracelyn Walls, Jim Windolf, Todd Zack.

Available for purchase for $15 a copy at this link on Amazon:

Amazon.com

*****

(With the extreme modesty that is my nature, I have to admit that I have three short stories in Issue 32 of The Literary Hatchet: “Auburn Delacroix,” “Divorcee with Two Growing Children,” “Mrs. Biederhof.”)

Depraved ~ A Capsule Book Review

Depraved cover
Depraved
~ A Capsule Book Review by Allen Kopp ~

Herman Webster Mudgett was born in a small town in New Hampshire in 1861. In young adulthood he became a doctor and changed his name to Henry Howard Holmes (or H. H. Holmes). He then embarked on a criminal career that included kidnapping, murder, arson, bigamy, insurance fraud, swindling, check forging, theft, grave-robbing, etcetera.

Because he was attractive, well-groomed, a stylish dresser and well-educated, he could easily ingratiate himself to people, men and women alike. The victims of his crimes never saw what was coming. Do you think he’d lock you in a bank vault and let you suffocate to death? No, he would never do that. His suit was too expensive, his mustache too neatly trimmed, his English too refined.

After moving to suburban Chicago, he purchased a drug store and became a druggist, but soon moved on to other business ventures. He built a block-long building nicknamed the Castle. It was a four-story mixed-use building, with apartments on the second floor and retail spaces, including a new drugstore. Reports by the sensationist press of the day called the building “Holmes’s Murder Castle,” claiming the structure contained secret torture chambers, trap doors, gas chambers and a basement crematorium. None of these claims turned out to be true. After he became well-known for his highly publicized crimes, much of what was written about him was untrue or exaggerated. Horrific, gruesome, bloody stories sold lots of newspapers.

By his own count, Dr. Holmes murdered twenty-seven people. Others claimed the number was much higher. He murdered a former college classmate in an insurance scheme. He inadvertently killed one of his girlfriends in a botched abortion. Because of his connection with the medical profession, he provided cadavers and skeletons to medical schools. Most of the people he murdered he did so to silence them. They knew too much about him or had become inconvenient to his plans.

What finally tripped him up was an insurance-fraud scheme. He and a “business partner,” Benjamin Pietzel, set out to defraud an insurance company of $10,000 (a fortune in the 1890s.) The plan was that Dr. Holmes would insure Benjamin Pietzel’s life, fake his death, collect on the policy and then the two of them split the profits. Dr. Holmes really did murder Pietzel, however, so he could keep all the insurance money for himself. He also murdered three of Pietzel’s five children to silence them.

He was tried and found guilty of the murder of Benjamin Pietzel. The police only needed to prove one of his murders to nab him. During his trial, he vehemently professed his innocence. He had done some bad things in his life, he said, but he never killed anybody. (His “confessions” about what he did or didn’t do might change daily.) He was hanged in Philadelphia in 1896, just short of his thirty-fifth birthday.

Depraved, by Harold Schechter, is the true-life story of Dr. H. H. Holmes, a man who became famous in the late nineteenth century for unspeakable murders and other crimes. He was, probably, what later would be called a sociopath or a psychopath. He himself said that, when he was born, Satan was there beside him and guided him through his life. At times he could sweetly profess shining innocence, but right at the end he admitted he was getting exactly what he deserved. Some people claimed he had supernatural abilities. After his death, several of the people who were instrumental in his capture and conviction met with unexplainable illnesses or had other misfortunes befall them.

Copyright © 2022 by Allen Kopp

The Alienist ~ A Capsule Book Review

The Alienist cover
The Alienist
~ A Capsule Book Review by Allen Kopp ~

Caleb Carr’s 1996 novel, The Alienist, is set in New York City in 1896. It is about a fictitious serial killer, the hunt for him, and the people doing the hunting. Dr. Laszlo Kreizler is the unorthodox “alienist” (psychiatrist) who takes it upon himself to find the killer. (The police are not interested in pursuing the case, for whatever reasons.) Dr. Kreizler enlists the aid of long-time friend John Schuyler Moore, a fashionable police reporter and man about town. Helping them is feminist Sara Howard, one of the first women to be employed by the New York Police Department (on an experimental basis, of course). She proves herself more than capable of doing whatever the men can do. She doesn’t want any of them to think she is inferior in any way because she is a woman. Rounding out the group are the Isaacson brothers (Lucius and Marcus), a pair of detective-sergeants trained in all kinds of detection arts that the others in the group aren’t privy to. Also offering support whenever it is needed (such as a fast getaway) are Cyrus and Stevie, a couple of loyal servants of Dr. Kreizler’s that he rescued from his mental-health practice.

New York in 1896 was a city of contrasts. Rich people lived in glittering palaces on Fifth Avenue, while, just blocks away, the poor lived in rows of squalid tenements. The serial killer could be just about anybody. No matter who he is, though, he is a definitely troubled. He selects his victims from children, but not just any children: they are “boy prostitutes.” He tortures and mutilates each of his victims in a certain manner that the group of investigators must try to make sense of. They assemble a psychological profile of the killer, based on little bits of information they can glean about him as they proceed. After much work and diligent research, they emerge with the information they need to apprehend the fiend. It is a triumph of good over evil.

The Alienist is meticulously detailed, atmospheric, and well-researched. It is a story about time and place as much as anything else. If you pick up the book and hold it in your hands, probably the first thing you will notice is that it is five hundred pages long. It will keep you turning the pages, but while you are reading it, you may well think it will never end. A little too long and too detailed? You decide.

Copyright © 2022 by Allen Kopp