Description
In January 1958, nineteen-year-old garbage collector named Charles Starkweather and his fourteen-year-old girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate, embarked on a brutal nine-day murder spree across Nebraska that left eleven people dead and shocked a nation.
In Starkweather Dreams, acclaimed poet and novelist Christopher Conlon (Midnight on Mourn Street, Mary Falls) turns his singular literary eye to these short, violent lives. Forgoing simple sensationalism, Conlon weaves a devastatingly intimate tapestry of the quiet desperation, poverty, and isolation that drove two ordinary teenagers to turn savage in the middle of America.
Moving between tender vulnerability and terrifying brutality, this masterful collection of “true crime” poetry explores the complex psychological landscape of a doomed romance on the run. Haunting, lyrical, and unflinchingly honest, Starkweather Dreams forces us to confront the human faces behind the headlines—and the tragic reality of a dark American myth.



