In 1971, while working the late-shift at a Seattle crisis clinic, true-crime writer Ann Rule struck up a friendship with a sensitive, charismatic young coworker: Ted Bundy. Three years later, eight young women disappeared in seven months, and Rule began tracking a brutal mass murderer. But she had no idea that the "Ted" the police were seeking was the same Ted who had become her close friend and confidant. As she put the evidence together, a terrifying picture emerged of the man she thought she knew--his magnetic power, his bleak compulsion, his double life, and, most of all, his string of helpless victims. Bundy eventually confessed to killing at least thirty-six women across the country.
Forty years after its initial publication, The Stranger Beside Me remains a gripping, intimate, and unforgettable true-crime classic, "as dramatic and chilling as a bedroom window shattering at midnight" (New York Times).
"Rule changed who read true crime—and sowed the seeds for the new generation of real-life tales of investigation."
Pamela Colloff is a journalist.
Ann Rule's "The Stranger Beside Me" scared me so much that I had to turn the spine of the book inward on my bookshelf so I wouldn't spot it and get spooked all over again. Here's @magiciansbook on Rule, and how she changed the true-crime genre: https://t.co/LlNuqAEy88
Funny writer of fiction + satire for @newyorkerhumor, @nytimes, @mcsweeneys. Teach @CatapultStory, co-founder of @satireandhumor, rep @dblackagency
@GraceGFreud A classic, "The Stranger Beside Me" by Ann Rule about working with Ted Bundy while writing true crime books...including about the murders he was committing at the time. Chilling and impossible to put down. https://t.co/MFsp6Lrq8q