Reference Desk
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Incest Archive
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Zero at the Bone: Story of Gene Simmons Mass Murderer by Bryce Marshall and Paul Williams (March 1991)
Posted on January 18, 2012 | No CommentsWhen Gene Simmons could no long force his daughter into an incestuous relationship, he knew he'd lost all control. And Gene couldn't stand not being in control. -
Once Upon a Time: A True Story of Memory, Murder and the Law by Harry Maclean (July 1994)
Posted on May 23, 2011 | No CommentsWhen 9-year-old Susan Nason was murdered in 1969, no one knew it would take 20 years to solve the case. Or that it was be a daughter's recovered memories that led to her father's arrest for the crime -
Redemption: A Story of Sisterhood, Survival, and Finding Freedom Behind Bars by Stacey Lannert (March 2011)
Posted on March 9, 2011 | 3 CommentsFor nine years, Stacey Lannert suffered sexual and physical abuse at the hands of father. Now she tells about the night it all ended and the 18 years she spent in prison for murder -
Tragedy In Tin Can Holler by Rozetta Mowery (May 2007)
Posted on April 9, 2010 | 5 CommentsA story of murder, incest, poverty, and the effects that sins of the have on the generations to come -
For a Mothers Love by Lee Butcher (December 1992)
Posted on March 17, 2010 | 3 CommentsFull of vivid testimony about murder, incest, bisexuality, homosexuality, hit men, wealth, and deceit, readers will find there is never a dull moment -
House of Secrets by Lowell Cauffiel (November 1999)
Posted on January 4, 2010 | 15 CommentsEddie Sexton couldn't get his own religous following, so he created a cult with the only ones he could control: his family. -
All His Fathers Sins by Walter Hecox and Ray Biondi
Posted on November 4, 2009 | 1 CommentI believe that she made a mockery of every woman who truly has suffered abuse. In Charlene's version of events, there are, in my opinion, just too many that she was a willing participant -
Strangler by Corey Mitchell (September 2007)
Posted on September 4, 2007 | No CommentsWhile seeking attention for his last killing, Shore outwitted himself




