How to Kill

How to Kill

by KrisHollington (Author)

Synopsis

Assassin, noun: a person who commits murder; especially; one who murders a politically important person either for hire or from fanatical motives. Fact: between 1950 and 2000, over 4,000 assassinations were carried out - including 40 on heads of state. Methods: exploding telephones, pipe-guns and bullets made of teeth, aspirin explosives, cobra-venom darts, a rifle that shoots around corners, a 'piss bomb' (10 cups of boiled urine mixed with nitric acid), exploding clams, an 'infernal machine' (a gun that fires 25 bullets at once), samurai swords, karate chops, poisoned umbrellas and a fuel-laden light aircraft. Sometimes even a regular gun. The targets are: popes, politicians, presidents, prime ministers, pop-stars, spin doctors, judges, businessmen, writers, revolutionaries, actors, royals, generals and dictators. The secret case files belong to: George W. Bush, Saddam Hussein, Uday Hussein, Ronald Reagan, Joseph Stalin, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Harry Truman, Martin Luther King, JFK, RFK, Medgar Evers, Georgi Markov, Woody Harrelson and the Serbian warlord Arkan. Coroner's verdict: The definitive book on assassination, How to Kill shows that sometimes, one murder can change the world.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
Publisher: Century
Published: 07 Jun 2007

ISBN 10: 1846051045
ISBN 13: 9781846051043
Book Overview: The secret history of the world's deadliest assassins

Media Reviews
Fascinating and good fun. He clearly knows his subject Daily Sport Fascinating The First Post How to Kill is no dry sociology of political murder. It is a history of the late twentieth century punctuated by gunshots...[an] exciting account Sunday Telegraph, Seven
Author Bio
Kris Hollington is a freelance investigative journalist living and working in London. He cut his teeth writing for a european news agency (International City Magazines) based in Luxembourg. Kris also hosted a daily lunchtime radio show on Radio Luxembourg for one year. Since returning to London, he has written a number of investigative pieces on subjects as diverse as African drug smugglers, diamond mining, mobile phone masts, art theft, murder, HM Customs and Excise and police corruption for The Sunday Times, The Guardian, The Evening Standard, The Voice, BBC Radio 4's File on 4 and BBC1's Panorama. He is currently co-producing a crime drama-documentary for Channel 4.