Cry for War

Fascinating book by Richard D. Reynolds about Suzan and Michael Carson, the so-called San Francisco "Witch" killers.

Follow the adventures of these nomadic killers as they make their home in abandoned cabins, live out of dumpsters, deal marijuana and preach their own version of Islam. They saw themselves as Hassassins, tools of Allah. Most people saw them as insane. Ric Reynolds gets inside their heads and tells it from their point of view.

You are prepared to hate them after the first chapter which is from the point of view of the victim's friends. Then, as we accompany them on their flight from justice and enter their minds, we find ourselves seduced into liking them and actually rooting for them. Such is the power of this book.

This is a book of the streets and the people who inhabit them. It's a book of punk rockers, welfare mothers, Golden Gate Park, pot farms, nomads crashing in abandoned cabins, and murder. Suzan and Michael are pot dealers (and smokers) who are high on their own insanity. They see themselves as Moslem assassins and their lives as a holy war against "Witches" and other "infidels."

Richard Reynolds becomes Suzan and Michael as does the reader. How many times have you become somebody else? How often has it been someone repellant and still you loved the experience? Highly recommended

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