Record Details
Book cover

Police heroes : true stories of courage about America's brave men, women, and K-9 officers

Book  - 2002
363.2092273 Whi
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Victoria Available

Browse Related Items

  • ISBN: 031228800X
  • Physical Description xxi, 264 pages : illustrations
  • Edition 1st ed.
  • Publisher New York : St. Martin's Press, 2002.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"Thomas Dunne Books."
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-249), Internet addresses and index.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 36.95

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 031228800X
Police Heroes : True Stories of Courage about America's Brave Men, Women
Police Heroes : True Stories of Courage about America's Brave Men, Women
by Whitlock, Chuck
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Publishers Weekly Review

Police Heroes : True Stories of Courage about America's Brave Men, Women

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Investigative reporter Whitlock (MediScams) switches from his usual subject of crime to crime-busting as he "honors and celebrates members of the law enforcement community who have distinguished themselves and their departments by acting in a courageous manner under extraordinary circumstances." Along with a chapter on police dogs, he recounts the stories of more than 100 officers from two dozen cities. Interwoven throughout is informative background material on techniques employed by various law enforcement organizations. With much material to choose from, Whitlock has selected diverse incidents-a kidnapping, an escalating riot, a child hostage situation, armed robbery, high-speed pursuits, rescues, firefights and burglaries-and captures the action with effective, fast-paced writing punctuated with fascinating facts illuminating little-known aspects of police procedures. Whitlock offers vivid descriptive details on everything from SWAT team gear to a Shreveport bicycle patrol. This book includes a chapter on more than 60 WTC heroes, but the abbreviated profiles seem thin compared to the potent preceding chapters. Nevertheless, those profiles should add to the appeal of this tribute. 85 b&w photos not seen by PW. Agent, Peter Miller, PMA. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 031228800X
Police Heroes : True Stories of Courage about America's Brave Men, Women
Police Heroes : True Stories of Courage about America's Brave Men, Women
by Whitlock, Chuck
Rate this title:
vote data
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Kirkus Review

Police Heroes : True Stories of Courage about America's Brave Men, Women

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

For hardcore cop groupies, Weegee-like snapshots of cops in action. Is every police officer a hero? With 740,000 cops in America, TV producer Whitlock settles for 25 incidents of valor, using interviews and descriptions to crack open the car chases, shootings, rescues, and other similar events that season the policeman's working life. His tales are cinematic. There's the shootout in a cop bar in Las Vegas as Dennis Devitte, an off-duty officer, shot it out with an armed robber, Emilio Rodriguez, taking eight bullets. There's the high-speed car chase in Boca Raton that led officer Paul Holland through four cities at up to 90 miles an hour and ended with a gun battle. There's the truly painful story of Pittsburgh policeman John Joseph Wilbur, who approached a suspicious car in which two men were apparently doing crack. They took off, with Wilbur unwillingly along for the ride, his wedding ring caught in the driver's door. Dragging himself up while the car bounced him along the street, Wilbur was able to get off some shots before the ring broke. Not a subtle writer, Whitlock works at two speeds: tabloid and super-tabloid. His officers are invariably modest, brave, and altruistic. His conviction that police are some rarer breed of human being takes an idea that has some merit at its core (some policemen do perform heroic acts) and inflates it until it becomes an authoritarian fantasy. That said, these stories are invariably gripping. The author devotes his final chapter to a rundown of the law-enforcement personnel killed at the World Trade Center, but, however nobly intended, his thumbnail sketches don't get us any closer to the police actions taken that day. More Dragnet than Hill Street Blues, an ambition it succeeds in.