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The Murder of Bob Crane: Who Killed the Star of Hogan's Heroes?
 
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The Murder of Bob Crane: Who Killed the Star of Hogan's Heroes? (Hardcover)

by Robert Graysmith (Author)
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

After a successful radio career, Bob Crane starred in the popular comedy series Hogan's Heroes from 1965 to 1971. When he failed to launch another series, he toured in plays throughout the Southwest. Unknown to his fans, Crane, who had been raised a strict Catholic, became obsessed with sex when he gained TV stardom. That obsession, in the form of photos and videos, effectively wrecked both of his marriages, according to Graysmith ( Zodiac ). In June of 1978 Crane was bludgeoned to death in a motel room in Scottsdale, Arizona. His constant companion was one John Carpenter, a video salesman. Graysmith agrees with the Scottsdale police that Carpenter was the killer, perhaps with a homosexual motive. The authorities finally secured an indictment in 1992, and the trial is pending. A carefully done study.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews

The 1978 Scottsdale, Arizona, murder of the star of the long- running TV sitcom Hogan's Heroes is reviewed in infinite detail here by Graysmith, who did the same job for a series of 70's and 80's rape-murders in San Francisco (The Sleeping Lady, 1990). In his opening chapters, leading up to Bob Crane's murder, Graysmith retells every date and sexual activity the star engaged in--whether or not they had anything to do with his death. Going by what we have here, much of Graysmith's superfine detail is superfluous as evidence, though it does render the victim's character. This density of fact, however, veils the weakness of the author's approach, which hangs upon circumstantial evidence and what after 14 years may become hard evidence by way of new forensic techniques in sampling DNA specimens and minute bits of blood and fatty brain tissue. Crane was living on reruns and a kind of supper-club-circuit play he was taking around the country when he befriended an overweight electronics salesman, John Carpenter, who consistently failed to score on double-dates with Crane even while Crane scored daily, if not twice daily, taking Polaroids and videos of his romps. Then the actor was found in bed with his head battered in by a blunt object. Scottsdale investigators finally linked Carpenter to the murder, but the state could find neither weapon, witness, nor motive and so failed to prosecute. But detectives refused to close the case, and Carpenter--who in the interim had entered a plea bargain in L.A. for molesting female minors--recently was arraigned for the killing. Gruesomely sexy but not a provocative read. (Eight pages of photos, 23 line drawings). -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

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3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars LIES!, Aug 3 2003
By A Customer
Graysmith iosn't someone you wanna listen to considering he finished his book on Bob before the trial was even finished! Leaving a ton of things out isn't the way to inform people of a murder. Auto-Focus, the movie, is filled with lies and the director has publicly admitted to putting them in to make the movie sell. The book is no different. If you wanna read the real story of Bob Crane, this isn't it. At all!
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1.0 out of 5 stars The not-so True Story of Bob Crane, May 4 2003
By Archbishop Dave Smith (Sacramento, CA) - See all my reviews
The books nice because it deals with Bob Crane's death, but Graysmith makes too many assumptions. There's not too many books about Bob Crane out there, so I was excited when it came out. I'd read Graysmith's Zodiac book and thought it was pretty good at the time.

In this, Graysmith tries to convict John Carpenter who I, like the jury, believe was innocent. When the book is written as if Carpenter is the guilty party, you believe Carpenter did it. Why would Carpenter kill his best friend? Graysmith says Carpenter was mad that Crane was going to cut him out of his life. Sheesh, like that's going to get Carpenter to 86 his best friend. He's a video geek, not a Soprano.

My guess is Bob Crane was killed by an [angry] girl mad about the photos. On the movie I saw of Crane with a random girl, she didn't know the camera was on. But maybe it was a jealous husband or boyfriend, but my bet is Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. One of Crane's photo albums was missing and I'll bet that has the nekkid picture of the girl who wacked Crane. She's probably 40 or 50 now and maybe your neighbor.

Crane was bludgeoned while sleeping and had the cord of a video cam wrapped in a ribbon around his neck. That sure sounds like [an angry] girl or husband to me.

Another thing that bugs me, and this is in the movie Auto Focus, was that Bob Crane had a penis implant. He died before they were giving those out.

But anyway, I like that it's about Bob Crane but I think that Graysmith was off the mark. I read a newstory in 2003 about the Zodiac killing and the guy that Graysmith said had done it was not the guy according to the the DNA they traced. Interesting writer, but he pulls his facts out of his escape tunnel if you know what I mean.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book, Jan 4 2003
By Biran Foran "Brian" (Rochester Hills, MI USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Book was a quick read, very well documented for a case that is over 20 years old Robert Graysmith thouroughly did his homework researching the death of Bob Crane. I would highly recommend.
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