
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 5 reviews on

Winner of the Texas Institute of Letters's Carr P. Collins Award
A New York Times Bestseller"Skip Hollandsworth knows his way around a crime scene...Fans of Erik Larson's 2003 hit, The Devil in the White City...will find similar pleasures here. This is true crime of high quality. . . Mr. Hollandsworth handles gruesome details with a smart, restrained touch...Chilling."--The New York Times
"Gripping and atmospheric...This true crime page-turner is a balanced and insightful examination of one of the most stirring serial killing sprees in American history, and certainly one of the least well-known."--Publishers Weekly (Starred Review) "Readers who loved The Devil in the White City now have the pleasure of reading The Midnight Assassin. It paints a compelling portrait of a culture at a turning point - that is, the capitol of Texas at the end of the 19th Century, when the barbarism of the frontier was giving way to the savagery of urban life."--Lawrence Wright, Pulitzer Prize-winning author The Looming Towerand Thirteen Days in September "As a magazine journalist, Skip Hollandsworth has forged a reputation as one of the best storytellers in the country. The Midnight Assassin takes his singular narrative skills to a thrilling new level. Reading this book is like cracking open a time capsule and breathing the air of a vanished era. In Hollandsworth's hands, one of the ghastliest and most inscrutable crimes in American history becomes hair-raisingly immediate, and the mystery at its center grows ever more mysterious with every page."--Stephen Harrigan, author of The Gates of the Alamo and A Friend of Mr. Lincoln "Skip Hollandsworth has achieved a literary miracle with The Midnight Assassin. With haunting granularity, Hollandsworth breathes vivid life into a forgotten, century-old tale of the hunt for America's first diabolical serial murderer--set in, of all places, the quaint but upwardly mobile town of Austin, Texas. To read The Midnight Assassin is to experience the lost innocence of a 19th-century capital city set on edge by the unseen monster in its midst."--Robert Draper, The New York Times Magazine and author of Dead Certain