These were the crimes that were meant to change the world, and sometimes did. The book connects the killing of the Kennedys or the murder that sparked the First World War with less well-known stories, such as the Berlin shooting of an instigator of the Armenian genocide or the attack on an American 'robber baron'. Taking in Malcolm X and Queen Victoria, Adolf Hitler and Andy Warhol, Charles Manson and Emma Goldman, Tsars, Presidents, and pop stars, Age of Assassins traces the process that turned thought into action and murder into an icon.
In tackling the history of political violence, the book is unique in its range and attention to detail, summoning up an age of assassination that is far from over.
In tackling the history of political violence, the book is unique in its range and attention to detail, summoning up an age of assassination that is far from over.
Excellent ... Newton's book is like a high-class compilation album: here are all the old favourites - Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theatre, Franz Ferdinand driving through Sarajevo, President Kennedy waving to the Dallas crowds, Robert Kennedy in an LA hotel - as well as some half-forgotten lesser hits ... Carefully researched and engagingly written, Newton's book pulls off the difficult trick of feeding our insatiable curiosity about assassinations while taking a strong moral stand against them. The Sunday Times