Richie, Thomas Thompson
Richie, Thomas Thompson
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Richie
A Father, His Son, and the Ultimate American Tragedy

Author: Thomas Thompson

Narrator: Shawn Compton

Unabridged: 9 hr 23 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 04/30/2019


Synopsis

George Diener, World War II veteran and traveling salesman, and his wife, Carol, had old-fashioned values and ordinary aspirations: a home, a family, the pleasure of watching their two sons grow up. But in February 1972, an unthinkable tragedy occurred in the basement of their Nassau County residence, shattering their hopes and dreams forever.

George and Carol doted on their shy eldest son, Richie. But at fifteen, the boy fell into a devastating downward spiral. He started smoking marijuana, shoplifting, and hanging out with drug dealers, and was soon arrested for assault and expelled from school. By the time his parents sought psychiatric counseling for their son, Richie was addicted to barbiturates and given to violent outbursts and threats. The boy George and Carol knew was long gone. Then, one winter evening, Richie came at his father with a steak knife and a suicidal cry of "Shoot!"

Edgar Award–winning author Thomas Thompson delivers a "scary, harrowing" account of a turbulent era in American history when the gulf between young and old, bohemian and conservative, felt wider and more dangerous than ever before (the New York Times Book Review).

About Thomas Thompson

Thomas Thompson (1933-1982) was a bestselling author and one of the finest investigative journalists of his era. Born in Forth Worth, Texas, he graduated from the University of Texas at Austin and began his career at the Houston Press. He joined Life as an editor and staff writer in 1961 and covered many major news stories for the magazine, including the assassination of John F. Kennedy. As Paris bureau chief, Thompson reported on the Six-Day War and was held captive by the Egyptian government along with other Western journalists. His first two books-Hearts, about the rivalry between two famous Houston cardiovascular surgeons, and Richie, the account of a Long Island father who killed his drug-addicted son-established Thompson's reputation as an originator, along with Truman Capote, of the "nonfiction novel."

In 1976, Thompson published Blood and Money, an investigation into the deaths of Texas socialite Joan Robinson Hill and her husband, John Hill. It sold four million copies in fourteen languages and won the Edgar Award and the Texas Institute of Letters prize for best nonfiction book. To research Serpentine, an account of convicted international serial killer Charles Sobhraj, Thompson flew around the world three times and spent two years in Asia. His other books include Lost!, a true story of shipwreck and survival, and the novel Celebrity, a six-month national bestseller. Among numerous other honors, Thompson received the National Headliner Award for investigative reporting and the Sigma Delta Chi medallion for distinguished magazine writing.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Joey

4.0 stars — I’m a huge Thomas Thompson fan (as evidenced by the 5 star reviews I gave the previous 3 books I read by him). With the completion of “Richie,” I have only two more to go before I’ve read all of his books (since I don’t read Westerns). I have spaced them out because the quality of writin......more

Impossible to put down. The author draws you right into the lives of this utterly ordinary family and shows you what drugs did to their household. This brought back grim memories of my own teen years which were right behind Richie's chronologically, but it seems especially unfair that this family di......more

Goodreads review by Koren

This is an oldie but a goodie. It's the story of a family that is torn apart by the drug addiction of the son. It was written in the 70's when times were different and there wasnt as much knowledge and resources as there are today. I was sad that the story ended the way it did but I wont give the en......more