#Criminalia
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Maria Trimarchi writes the script for every episode of Criminalia. However, there’s one part of each show where she likes to be kept in the dark — podcasting partner Holly Frey’s show-ending cocktail recipe.
(via It Takes Two: ‘Criminalia’ Hosts on Their Devious New Season)
#shondaland#true crime#crime#podcast#true crime podcast#historical crime#cocktail#Maria Trimarchi#Holly Frey#Criminalia#Stuff You Missed in History Class
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I'm listening to a podcast episode about the epidemic of arson (usually perpetrated by landlords committing insurance fraud) in the Bronx in the 1970s and how it was exacerbated by the closing of multiple fire stations in all boroughs of NYC due to shitty computer analysis based on deeply flawed data and the part of my brain that can't help but put pop culture in its historical context was like, "oh, that's why a decommissioned firehouse was for sale in the original Ghostbusters."
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A feast for the senses, this sumptuously illustrated book will introduce you to some of the most infamous women throughout world history, united by their shared taste for poison. Welcome to the League of Lady Poisoners. This riveting and well-researched volume by Lisa Perrin weaves together the stories of more than twenty-five accused women poisoners, exploring the circumstances and skill sets that led them to lives of crime. You might find yourself rooting for some of them—like Sally Bassett, who helped poison her granddaughter’s enslavers in Bermuda, or Giulia Tofana, who sold her name-brand concoction to women wanting to be rid of their abusive (or otherwise undesirable) husbands. Other stories, though—including that of Yiya Murano, one of Argentina’s most notorious swindlers and serial killers, or the terrifying Nurse Jane Toppan—may prove less palatable. Organized into thematic chapters based on the women’s motives, the book also includes an illustrated primer that delves into the origins and effects of common poisons throughout history, as well as a foreword by Holly Frey and Maria Trimarchi, creators and hosts of the podcast Criminalia. It is a treat for true crime fans, feminist history buffs, and any curious readers fascinated by the more macabre side of human nature. TRUE CRIME GALORE: Women can do anything—even commit murder. This thoughtfully researched and insightful survey into the lives of the poisoners explores the toxic events that put these women in the spotlight, the deceptive methods and substances they used, and their legacies today. The League of Lady Poisoners is a thrilling deep dive for fans of true crime podcasts, docuseries, and books. EYE-CATCHING GIFT: Illustrator and author Lisa Perrin’s beautiful and distinctive art style blends the romantic allure of these pop culture legends with the disturbing and twisted facts of their lives. The hardcover is decorated with shining foil, and the interior contains clever Victorian-inspired lettering, borders, and diagrams that complement the text. Readers and illustrated book collectors will love all the details honoring the Golden Age of Poison. FASCINATING, DIVERSE STORIES OF WOMEN WHO KILL: These women lived in different time periods and had varying cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds that influenced their motives. Some acted out of defiance—like the Angel Makers of Nagyrév, who taught women how to dispose of their abusive husbands in Hungary. Others schemed their way to power and money, including Empress Wu Zetian of China and Belle Gunness, who killed more than 14 people in the American Midwest. Discover all their stories in this engaging collection . . . if you have the stomach for them.
https://amzn.to/3N4jfXe
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btw i love your art and vibes and idk if you're into ace attorney anymore but i wrote a whole analysis of edgeworth based on one of my favorite legal essays.... im a law student who loves history so we're like. similar vibes! do you have any books on legal history, or any legal essays, you'd recommend? :0
Thank you! I do generally still like aa, I just post about it a bit less- oh but that sounds very interesting as a base for an analysis. Eye.
I am taking a course on legal history this semester, actually! So I hope you won't mind if my suggestions are taken from my syllabus or from the bibliography of said syllabus that I looked at for my own research (and hopefully you can find translations if needed): - "Lo Stato Moderno in Europa. Istituzioni e diritto" by M. Fioravanti - "Historie du droit administratif (de la Révolution au début des années)" by F. Burdeau - "L'età dei diritti" by N. Bobbio - "The philosophical Origins of Modern Contract Doctrine" by J. Gordley - "Scienza Giuridica Italiana, un profilo storico" by P. Grossi (his work in general on the history of law is very interesting) And specifically on criminal justice: - "Diritto e Ragione, teoria del garantismo penale" by L. Ferrajoli - "Vidi communiter observarit" in the journal 'quaderni fiorentini per la storia del pensiero giuridico moderno'. - "I volti della giustizia e del potere: analisi comparativistica del processo" by M.R. Damaska - "Criminalia (nascita dei sistemi penali)" by F. Cordero
Apologies if this is a long list, of most of these I've had the chance to read specific chapters and not the entire work, but! I thought them quite interesting regardless + I haven't had the time to look up the specific authors I'm sure there's at least one here whose values I don't agree with but I am one man and this is a spur-of-the-moment list
#[.asks]#sevenyeargap#law student who likes history to history student who likes law communication happening rn. Similar vibes indeed!#I wanted to add two german titles to this but they're more- obscure? I think? More specifically about work-laws and international law#infodump tag
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A bit ago you asked for podcast app recommendations. Do you have any recommendations for podcasts to listen to?
These are all the ones I listen to, I'll add a little summary for each one if that's alright.
Stuff You Missed in History Class: This podcast has been going for over a decade, starting in 2008. The format has changed since its inception and honestly, you don't need to go through the entire playlist (unless you want to!). Each episode is about a certain event, figure, or theme from history with show notes that cite their sources, and the hosts are very upfront about where and how they got their information. Some of these subjects are two-parters, but that's the exception and not the rule mostly. I enjoy learning about new things from history or, if I know the bare basics of them, I enjoy learning more in depth information. My suggestion is to just scroll through and see what topic interests you.
Criminalia: This is another history podcast, but each season focuses on a certain type of crime, with each episode focusing on someone in that theme. At the end of each episode, the hosts also make up a cocktail and mocktail inspired by the subject that day. (The first two seasons don't have mocktails because they only realized how popular a non-alcoholic version would be after season three where they made mocktails to go with the "imposter" theme and they got really good feedback about it.) Some of the seasons are hit or miss for me, but even if I don't necessarily like the theme, the episode is still good to listen to from a learning standpoint.
DNA: ID: One of my true crime podcasts. I like this one because it focuses more on how DNA testing has solved cold cases using genetic genealogy. I also appreciate that the host doesn't use full names to protect the privacy of a lot of people in the story. She uses full names for victims and perpetrators, and some family, but people who turned out not to be involved in the case are given initials. My only beef is that she does so much research on the cases, but she doesn't extend that to learning how to pronounce some non-English names. However, otherwise, she does treat each case with a lot of gravity and respect, so. Idk. She's recently started interspersing solved cases with cases seeking more information on recently identified Does so that's pretty cool.
Dear Hank & John: It's a comedy podcast about death, where two brothers give you dubious advice and bring you all the news about both Mars and AFC Wimbledon. They're currently on a "we'll update if Hank feels like it" schedule because Hank is currently going through chemotherapy but they have 372 episodes to tide you over in the meantime. I enjoy it a lot because I enjoy the Green brothers' sense of humor, and on the occasions that one of the brothers is away for something, their guest host is always interesting.
Good Assassins: Part historical, part true crime. I've only just started this one so I'm gonna copy and paste the summary because I don't think otherwise I would do it justice: A spy story. A detective case. The mission was simple: to arrange the death of one man. The goal was to send a message to all Nazi fugitives around the world: "we can find you and we can kill you." This is the true story of an undercover mission to hunt down a savage Nazi murderer who helped Hitler’s forces kill 30,000 men, women, and children. The survivors gave him a name after the Holocaust: The Butcher of Latvia. The spies would travel halfway around the world to carry out the sentence. The mission wasn’t for one life. It was for 6 million.
Welcome to Night Vale: This was the first queer media I consumed since I watched Tara die in BtVS. I was tired of kill your gays so I simply didn't consume any queer content. This show simultaneously healed me and hollowed me out for all the other shows that could have been this good. I like each story line, I like the additional novels, and I like the weather. This is my comfort show. I start it from the beginning every time I catch up to the recent updates.
Good Morning Night Vale: The official recap show of WtNV. It's hosted by Meg Bashwiner (she voices Deb, a sentient patch of haze), Symphony Sanders (she voices Tamika Flynn, the former teenage militia leader, current City Counsel member), and Hal Lublin (he voices Steve Carlsberg, Cecil's brother-in-law). I feel like I'm hanging out with friends talking about Night Vale when I listen to it. :) I think if you like recap shows, it's a good one.
The Murder Chronicles: Ngl I started this in season one where it was called The Shadow Girls, which I started because it was advertised as a deep dive into the Green River Killer's victims instead of just being about him. I was interested because the host was in the same age range as GRK's victims and she talks extensively about how scary it was for girls her age at the time. She also goes into how the police failed the victims and why, and also how it affected her. It also has a push for one of the victims to get the reward she was promised for turning Ridgway in. It felt like a cause. The second season is more about other true crimes which is... fine. Doesn't have the same heart that the first season did, but does include interviews with the detectives who worked on the cases, though, which I find interesting. Idk it's not really doing much for me anymore so I might drop it.
Scene of the Crime: Delphi: This is a podcast that (ostensibly) focuses on one case per season, but it's literally just one season and then a ton of advertisements from other podcasts from their company. That being said, they went forward with the families' permission, including numbers for people to leave tips to the police. Since they have the permission of the family (and interviews with some family members, even) it's one of the few that I'm comfortable with. That being said, I'm only subscribed to it still in case there's another update in the case. They don't seem to have published any episodes in a while.
These are the ones I listen to on Amazon Music, which are all true crime:
Cold: It's a narrative podcast focused on missing persons cases. It's got three seasons-- Season one is about Susan Powell, season two is about Joyce Yost, and season three is about Sheree Warren. They're well-researched and use recordings from the victims/perpetrators which is very interesting. The host seems to have permission from the families (at least the first season seems so) but even if he didn't, he doesn't make emotionally charged statements. He states the facts. I'd even go so far as to say the most emotion he ever shows is when he talks about why Susan Powell's case means so much to him.
Suspect: It's an investigative series about mislaid justice and the kinds of weighty decisions that detectives, lawyers, and jurors make every day - decisions that, once made, are almost impossible to reverse. Both of these seasons are incredibly interesting, including interviews with people involved in the cases. There hasn't been a new episode since February, but it's still a good show to go back to, I think.
Killer Psyche Daily: This podcast is hosted by former FBI profiler Candice DeLong, who I'd actually heard of (worked on the Unabomber case). It's a short, daily podcast (tenish minutes per podcast) where she draws on her years of experience to break down current criminal cases for laymen to understand, look back on historic crimes, and share insight on how the mind of a killer works. On one hand, it definitely errs on the side of police. However, she was also law enforcement, so it makes sense and doesn't really annoy me. On the other hand, she also has a lot of insight on the psychology of criminals, and she has guests on regularly who also have a lot of information to add to current cases who don't come across as pro-police.
There are a handful of others that I've listened to on and off but obviously they haven't really stuck with me.
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Not Ernest Hemingway and William Carlos Williams sticking up for the weird little fascist fucker. Space-time continuum, give me 5 minutes alone in the cage with Ezra Pound and a brick. We'll see what kind of antisemitic bs he has to say in 6 minutes.
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The League of Lady Poisoners (CBR16 #21)
I came to this book via the podcast Criminalia. I started listening to the podcast last year and spent about 3 months blasting through all available episodes whenever I was in a car. The hosts, Holly Frey and Maria Trimarchi did their entire first season on lady poisoners, and they had Lisa Perrin on for an interview to highlight her book of the same topic when it published last year (of which…
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I was listening to Criminalia today and their newest episode on Thomas Jones, who was a teenager that routinely broke into Buckingham Palace for what apparently was mainly just shits and giggles. All I could think of was this exchange happening
HRM Queen Victoria: Mr. Jones, are you under my sofa?
Thomas Jones: [muffled from under the sofa]...no.
Victoria: Fine. You like being under my furniture? I’ll send you down under to Australia. That should at least prevent this from happening for a few months!
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bgmole, 2019, tweet: la fine (della storia) della letteratura
bgmole, 2019, tweet: la fine (della storia) della letteratura
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CRIMINALIA
Academia Mexicana de Ciencias Penales
Rediseño · Portada Revista
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Maria Trimarchi and Holly Frey first met while writing and editing the curiosity-driven website HowStuffWorks. Years later, the pair still have an enviable friendship, the kind that leads to the podcasters often finishing each other’s sentences — when they’re not peppering the conversation with playful inside jokes.
(via With 'Criminalia,' Holly Frey and Maria Trimarchi Bring Humor to Historical True Crime Podcasts)
#shondaland#podcast#Holly Frey#Maria Trimarchi#HowStuffWorks#Criminalia#true crime#crime#murderesses
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It's book review time! This time for a book I actually finished like a month ago and completely forgot to do my review until now!
So I read the Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner back in August. I got it through Book of the Month because nothing in July (when I signed up) particularly called out to me and this book has been on my TBR for a while so I took a chance on it.
Overall it was... kinda meh. It reads easy enough and I finished it in a week but I wish there had just been more to it.
My overall rating was 3.5/5 stars and I'll get into the details under the cut.
So this book is one of those split historical/modern perspectives books, similar to the Paris Orphan but not done quite as well in my opinion (and a lot of other people's opinions too). The concept is there, an apothecary that helped women kill their abusive spouses or men in their lives, which certainly existed (side note: if that is what interested you about this novel, I would highly recommend the first season of the podcast Criminalia, which was all about lady poisoners and each episode includes a cocktail recipe to go with the story. Anyway,) and are important to study, but the modern perspective was lacking.
I'm in the minority that didn't really mind Caroline, but I kind of interpreted her as being raised in like an Evangelical household where the decisions she says she made with regards to her husband (such as not going to grad school, taking a job she didn't want just for the stability, etc) made more sense? But then towards the end her husband shows up and it just makes everything very, very weird. He admits to drinking some of her essential oils on purpose to get her attention because he thought she was going to leave him for cheating on her (no fucking shit dude). If she wasn't already preparing the divorce papers when you cheated on her with one of your office workers, then she definitely would after you intentionally poisoned yourself and almost died.
The past segment of the book also felt somewhat weak. I understand that it had to take place before the invention of poison detection in forensic analysis during autopsies started getting better and more accurate, but other than that it didn't feel like Penner utilized the setting to its fullest extent. Also the twelve year old character thought her vagina was haunted by the ghost of her old master and nobody explained the concept of periods to her? Why. They kinda just brushed it off as "all girls and women bleed once every lunar cycle" but never explained that it was natural to her.
Finally, my biggest gripe with the book was the absolutely insane focus on pregnancy. It feels like all the characters except the child are obsessed with having children. The old lady who runs the apothecary laments how her lover had forced her to have a miscarriage (which at first I didn't mind as a motivation for her, but then), one of her customers comes in and wants to kill her husband's lover so he'll sleep with her and get her pregnant and she can have children, and the most egregious example of all, the modern character, as her husband was being taken to the hospital, thinks that one of the emergency responder's making a remark about keeping essential oils out of reach of children is an attack on her for not having children. Girly, it's just a statement of fact. You shouldn't keep essential oils within reach of children or they will eat it and die.
I think towards the end Penner was trying to go for some sort of magical realism or just in general actual magic in the setting but it was not very well executed. The only real sign of it was the 12yo girl character believed that magic could save the little hole in the wall apothecary and brewed some "potions" to keep them alive in dire situations and she chugged it before jumping from a bridge into the Thames, which certainly the impact into the cold water should have killed her almost instantly and we have not been led to believe she knows how to swim either. At the end we see that she survived and hinted in the one piece of writing about her that survived to the 21st century that she believed the potion protected her on that day. Yeah. If she wanted to add that little hint of magic, I wish it had more of an influence on the plot and more of a presence in the book or was just left out entirely.
Anyway, it's an easy read. If you need something quick to read and get out of a slump, it'll do that. It's not awful but it's certainly odd and could have done more with the connections between modern and historical instead of just some random tourist coming across one of the old bottles in the river on a vacation away from her cheating husband. It's not the worst book I've ever read but it's also not worth writing home about because it was so good. It's average. It's so unfortunate that it has such a beautiful cover and such a mid-tier story.
#shay speaks#book reviews#bookblr#the lost apothecary#i had most of these thoughts written down in the bad books book club discord from when i was still reading it#link is in my carrd if you'd like to come join us!
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cant stop listening to true crime podcasts but they all suck and ebd up becoming super fucking ableist so i just keep hopping around....have vetoed a morbid podcast and true crime obsessed currently on crime junkies and true crime all the time sitting on criminalia and obscura as possibilities...........im in a Funk
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YOOOO THE NEW SEASON OF CRIMINALIA SOUNDS SO GOOOOOOOD BLACKMAILERS HERE WE COME
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