|
Post by Sue on Aug 12, 2020 19:51:58 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by xjd on Aug 16, 2020 19:55:48 GMT -5
does anyone know if this is an updated edition or just a different publisher? i can't seem to find out any real info about it.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Aug 17, 2020 11:35:22 GMT -5
Hey xjd, I believe the book link that Sue posted is for the latest release of Norris book "A Talen To Deceive". It is the same book but with a new publisher (CamCat Publishing) and the book has been edited/updated. Norris originally released his book in March 2006 published by SynergE books and it had 354 pages. SynergeE Books released a second edition published in September 2013 with 328 pages. This newest edition through CamCat has 384 pages! Now I am wondering what changes and additional material have been included in this book. This newest version is also in Kindle format. I think I may have to buy it to see what's new and different.
|
|
|
Post by xjd on Aug 18, 2020 18:46:06 GMT -5
thanks amy for the info. you are amazing at finding stuff out! i too am interested in what the additional material might be. after i read my copy of Norris's book, i was in the Dwight Jr.-did-it camp. and i still think he's a shadowy figure that needs to be looked at more. definitely going to have to read this new version. sometimes i make myself dizzy by how much waffling i do on this case edit: ok, i gave in and ordered it. i know what i'm reading Labor Day weekend!
|
|
|
Post by Sue on Aug 18, 2020 22:04:55 GMT -5
Young journalist Seth Moseley was able to gain access to Charles Lindbergh in the very early days after the kidnapping because Moseley was a college friend of Dwight Morrow, Jr. Here's the 1982 Yankee Magazine article -- www.lindberghkidnappinghoax.com/moseley.htmlI also recently came across another article that Moseley wrote in the 1980s. That one fleshes out a little more the meeting between him and Lindbergh. I will try to find it and post later. I know there is a video online of Moseley, in later years, discussing the kidnapping.
|
|
|
Post by Michael on Aug 19, 2020 11:42:05 GMT -5
does anyone know if this is an updated edition or just a different publisher? i can't seem to find out any real info about it. I was trying to get an answer for you straight from the horse's mouth so I sent Bill an email. Unfortunately, it got thrown back at me by the Mail Daemon so I guess I should have kept in touch more often since he's obviously got a new email address.
|
|
|
Post by Sue on Sept 1, 2020 18:12:56 GMT -5
Although similar, later in his life Seth Moseley gave different variations of the same account of meeting Lindbergh soon after the baby's disappearance. Did Lindbergh drive up to Moseley in his Franklin or was the car a black Cadillac? One account has Lindbergh admitting that Dwight was in the house, but flatly refuses to allow Seth to come into his home to see Dwight. Also, the note that Seth gave the trooper asked for Dwight to come out to see him, but in another note Seth asks to come into the house to visit with Dwight. Seth wasn't asking to speak to Lindbergh. A Talent to Deceive has Dwight Jr. committing the crime. Hope Nelson, Governor Harold Hoffman's daughter, also said Dwight was the name she heard mentioned most often. I'm surprised that Dwight was in the Hopewell house so soon after March 1, 1932. Wasn't he supposed to be at Amherst? I'll have to look at the dates that he was at Craig House in Beacon, New York. See A Talent to Deceive: Who Really Killed the Lindbergh Baby? by William Norris, pages 21-22. www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://lindberghkidnap.proboards.com/thread/898/seth-moseley&ved=2ahUKEwjFx678iMnrAhUFg3IEHdtvC5cQFjADegQIDBAB&usg=AOvVaw3Ccc6T_6wtzQjTBzJPH8vX
|
|
|
Post by wolfman666 on Sept 1, 2020 19:29:00 GMT -5
another absurd theory
|
|
|
Post by Michael on Sept 3, 2020 10:37:25 GMT -5
There's a reason why this theory needed to be explored regardless of whatever conclusion one comes to. That's because it was prevalent during the entire investigation and there are certain facts/circumstances that demonstrate why it was. The family was being completely secretive about Dwight Jr. because of his mental health so it spurred suspicion because no one knew what was going on with him. ++++++ Sue: I am about to use a source in V4 that you directed me to. I wanted your permission to acknowledge you for this in the book.
|
|
|
Post by Sue on Sept 3, 2020 17:44:12 GMT -5
That's fine, Michael.
I'm not sure what source that is, but thank you for acknowledging me!
|
|