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Nathan Leopold seemed to live a charmed life: a published, polyglot college graduate by the time he was 19 and from a prominent, wealthy Chicago family. So, it was a shock to everyone when he and his lover, Richard Loeb, confessed to killing their 14-year-old neighbor Bobby Franks “for a thrill.”
During the summer of 1924 the world watched in fascinated horror as the pair were defended by the famous Clarence Darrow in what many labeled "the trial of the century." There was a massive public outcry when the murderers were spared the death penalty, and once they were behind bars, most hoped they would never be heard from again.
33 years after the murder, it seemed that Nathan Leopold was a changed man. In prison he ran a high school and library, worked as a nurse, and helped find a cure for malaria. He was deemed rehabilitated and paroled to a tiny town in the mountains of Puerto Rico. There he got a degree in social work, raised funds to build a hospital, and advocated for the abolishment of prisons and capital punishment. When he died in 1971 there was an outpouring of support for the “gentle” “reformed” killer. Yet his life was not what it seemed.
100 years after the murder, this groundbreaking new biography uses previously unseen archival collections to look at the full life of Nathan Leopold and reveal the motivations behind Bobby’s death and the secrets kept hidden from history.
Published | 15 Apr 2023 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 344 |
ISBN | 9781538158609 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 1 b/w illustration; 15 b/w photos |
Dimensions | 231 x 161 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Fascination with Nathan Leopold, and his partner in crime the ‘evil’ Dickie Loeb, seems to survive decades of changes in fashion and taste in celebrities. This volume usefully sheds light on Nathan Leopold’s childhood and return to society after imprisonment. Crime and its reception always a mirror of its social context, when and where it happened, and later.
Leigh B. Bienen, senior lecturer, Northwestern University School of Law, and co-author of Crimes of the Century: From Leopold and Loeb to O.J. Simpson
Arrested Adolescence is an engrossing account of one of the most sensational crimes of the 1920s. Through meticulous research, Rebain gives us a careful and astute retelling of the life of Nathan Leopold, his 'crime of the century,' and his life after prison. What emerges is a complex portrait of a privileged and gifted youth, a self-avowed hedonist, and an unapologetic conman, unspooling a life that has been layered in so much myth and legend for decades.
James Polchin, author of Indecent Advances: A History of True Crime and Prejudice Before Stonewall
In Arrested Adolescence, author Erik Rebain delves deeply into the life of Nathan Leopold, challenging the lurid portraits and self-serving narratives surrounding the infamous murderer. At the book's heart, Rebain wrestles with the question of Leopold’s rehabilitation and whether he was truly a reformed man. Looking closely at Leopold’s 33 years in prison and the 13 years in Porto Rico after his release, Rebain tells a new story, one that differs dramatically from Leopold’s and his supporter's carefully crafted tale of redemption. Utilizing a vast array of archival materials, Rebain presents Leopold in all his human flaws, a man whose life, behaviour, and motivations could never escape his teenaged obsessions, entitlements, desires, and crime.
David S. Churchill, University of Manitoba, Canada
Erik Rebain is the go-to expert on the Leopold and Loeb case. He has spent years researching the crime, and generously sharing his knowledge with fellow Leopold and Loeb obsessives. He brings a much-needed queer perspective to Leopold's later years, showing the ruse of his late marriage, his mutual admiration society connection to Roy Cohn, and the other gay power-brokers of mid-Century America. Leopold does not come across as sympathetic in any way, and yet he is also cleared of the actual wielding of the deadly chisel in this fellow-expert's mind. Methodically researched, and written with a clear eye, Rebain uncovers the life that Leopold created years after the Bobby Franks murder in tight, riveting prose.
Jill Dearman, author of Jazzed
The case has been the subject of movies, documentaries, and numerous books. Erik Rebain, an archivist for the Chicago Tribune and Chicago History Museum, weighs in with a new, deeply researched biography of one-half of the infamous duo. Arrested Adolescence: The Secret Life of Nathan Leopold is the product of a decade of research and Rebain was in his element as he scoured dozens of archives for fresh material unseen for a century.... A century after the Jazz Age caught fire, its crimes continue to offer new insights and timely cautionary tales.
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
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