Essay sample library > Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI

Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI

2024-02-04 09:52:13

Author David Grann spent years investigating and discovering new evidence when writing "Flower Moon Killer". I am a fan of Lost Z City and I am looking forward to seeing this latest book is like my favorite nonfiction. I am not disappointed. I did not expect to get angry just by reading it.

When I was in my teens, I was a huge horse racing fan, but I know the wealth of the country of Osage in the 1920s. One of the Osage has the Kentucky Derby Championship. But this knowledge is rough. I do not know how rich the Osage is, but I certainly do not know that the government will not spend all the money to trust them. I should not be that simple. It had to be crazy for many white people and they pressed the Osage against the land they thought was not fit for them, but oil was discovered and Osage was the most wealthy person in the world Will be. One way in which they try to play a role in this wealth is to declare that Osage is not suitable for wisely using their own money. In many cases, Caucasians are responsible for family money, and they give allowance to their words (their own business knowledge is expensive)

Did you really be surprised why this greed is soaring to murder? After all, this is a natural progression. Until today, Osage has a problem of trust. They tried to investigate dozens of murders but instead hid these killings. What Gran did with "Flower Moon Killer" is to explore the real scope of the problem deeply. As I read, my fear, I can not explain, and some other words emerge. For those with a conscience, this is an unpleasant reading; however, it is attractive and important.

This book will not have the title of another year, it is the murderer of Huayue: the murder of Osage and the birth of FBI. In another three years, you can choose the amount that you can explain fairly generous. Still, it is clear how good Grann's book is. In 2012, I went to Oklahoma for the first time. When I visited Osage National Museum, there was a huge panoramic picture on the wall; it showed Osage and white settlers. It was filmed in 1924. Part of the photo was cut off and the debris was lost. I asked about the missing part of a wonderful woman named Catherine Red Corn, a museum curator. She said that it looked like it hurts too much. Pointed to the gap in the photo, she said that the devil was standing there

Killer of Hanatsuki: Murder of Osage and the birth of FBI of David Glan: This is nonfiction, but it seems like a good novel. Granna talks about murder and corruption in Oklahoma. I had never heard of these events before, and I stopped working on the street to end the last chapter. They can not kill all of us: a new era of racial justice by Ferguson, Baltimore, Wesley Raleigh. I think that this book is very bad, but it is truly exciting. I have read a lot of news articles about Ferguson, Baltimore, and Black Life. This book fills in my knowledge gap and introduces me to some of the sports's most active organizers.