There has always been something about true crime stories that catch my attention, maybe it has to do with my reporter background. That’s why I’m delighted to share fellow journalist Chip Jacobs’ intriguing true crime tale.
From the most murderous
era in American history, a vintage true crime tale set among Los Angeles’
glassy towers and endless ribbons of asphalt. Who could resist that?
The Darkest Glare
In 1979 the City of Angels had its fair share of devils. Howard Garrett was one of them. His contractor’s license bought him an entrĂ©e into a Space Matters, a real estate development company run out of a hip mansion on the edge of LA’s Miracle Mile district. The company’s owners, debonair, slick-talking Richard Kasparov and self-conscious, nerdy Jerry Schneiderman, were L.A.’s Young Turks of interior architecture.
When Richard interviewed the
quiet, buzzard-faced Howard, he figured he’d found the perfect supervisor to
oversee construction for a firm hungry to expand. What neither he nor his
partner Jerry knew was that by hiring Howard, they’d unloosed a monster into
their midst.
In The Darkest Glare: A True Story of Murder, Blackmail and Real Estate
Greed in 1979 Los Angeles (Rare
Bird Books; ISBN 978-1644281918;
on sale March 9, 2021; $18.00), author and journalist Chip
Jacobs recounts a spectacular, noir true-crime saga from one of the most
murderous times in American history.
It’s 1979 and future NBA stars
Magic Johnson and Larry Bird are meeting on the court for the first time,
Laverne & Shirley is the most watched show on TV, and the Los Angeles
murder rate is the highest in recorded history. Even before Howard Garrett
entered Richard and Jerry’s lives, he had managed to slither away from a series
of brutal crimes unprosecuted.
But if Howard was the violent one of the
trio, Richard was its resident grifter. As the firm expanded, Richard figured
out ways to bleed the company dry for his own gain, including by hitting up
Howard to put up his credit line in service of the company. When Richard’s
grift is exposed, Jerry cuts all ties to him while a - by now - enraged Howard
loses everything.
Using his steel blue El Camino to stalk
his victims and X-ray glower to intimidate everyone, Howard unleashes his blood
thirsty vengeance and decides to create a murder-for-hire corporation employing
a motley crew of junkies and bottom-scrapers. The first targets: the owners of
Space Matters.
But Howard’s band of would-be assassins
bungled through his scheme time and again in scenes more reminiscent of The
Three Stooges than The Godfather. It took almost a dozen tries to kill the
first Space Matters partner, Richard.
Jerry – the surviving partner and
unlikely hero of the story – blackmailed and threatened, finds himself in an
odyssey of disguises, getting not-so-legal, legal advice from his lawyer while
surreptitiously meeting in a graveyard, seeking protection from a charismatic,
ex-Israeli mercenary, and being used as bait in a LAPD-orchestrated showdown at
the La Brea Tar Pits.
Whether its stumblebum killers
or a mass murder averted by a kid watching Laverne & Shirley, you’ll never
read about bloodlust like this. Or see Southern California the same way.
Chip Jacobs conducted hundreds of hours
of interviews and reviewed thousands of pages in Howard Garrett’s case to
connect the dots. The resulting book is a feast for true crime lovers as well
as for lovers of Los Angeles noir. The Darkest Glare is vintage true
crime at its finest.
As a bonus, The Darkest Glare
includes an original true crime short also by Chip Jacobs, “Paul & Chuck”.
“Paul & Chuck” is the truly terrifying and weird story of crusading Los
Angeles attorney Paul Morantz who in the late 1970s went to battle against one
of the most dangerous and violent cults America has ever seen: Synanon. It’s
story that’s guaranteed to make your skin crawl!
Meet the Author
Chip Jacobs is an author and journalist. His fiction debut, Arroyo, about two parallel lives gravitating around Pasadena, California's Colorado Street Bridge, was a Los Angeles Times bestseller. His other books include the biography Strange As It Seems: the Impossible Life of Gordon Zahler, and the bestselling Smogtown: the Lung-Burning History of Pollution, and its sequel about China, The People’s Republic of Chemicals, the latter two with William J. Kelly.
His reporting has
appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles Daily News, The New
York Times, LA Weekly, CNN, and the Pasadena
Weekly, among others. Jacobs, a graduate of the University of Southern
California, is the recipient of numerous writing awards.
He is at work on his
follow up novel, and several non-fiction projects.
Thanks so much for stopping by today. Are you a fan of true crime stories? Had you ever heard of this killing spree?
The truth is often stranger (and sometimes nastier) than fiction isn't it?
ReplyDeleteWhat Elephant's Child said. Sometimes you just can't make this stuff up.
ReplyDelete