Gone at midnight : the mysterious death of Elisa Lam
Available Copies by Location
Location | |
---|---|
Victoria | Available |
Browse Related Items
Subject |
Drowning victims. Drowning > California > Los Angeles. |
Genre |
True crime stories. |
- ISBN: 9780806540054
- Physical Description 352 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
- Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2020.
Content descriptions
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Additional Information
BookList Review
Gone at Midnight : The Tragic True Story Behind the Unsolved Internet Sensation
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
In 2013, Chinese Canadian student Elisa Lam set out on a tour of the West Coast. She never returned home. Lam checked into Los Angeles' Cecil Hotel, known for its scandalous history, and vanished. Complaints from hotel guests about rancid tap water led to a gruesome discovery: Lam's body was found floating in a rooftop water tank. An eerie surveillance video of Lam rocketed her case to internet fame. While her death was officially determined to be an accident, unanswered questions remain. Anderson was one of thousands drawn to Lam's case, and he set out to uncover the facts and challenge the outrageous conspiracies spread online. His search for the truth led him down a surprising path of self-discovery, igniting a crusade against the stigmatization of mental illness. Rather than exploiting Lam's death as a morbid meme, Anderson takes an empathic and humanizing approach. His thorough research and passionate writing make a fascinating read. Extremely detailed and featuring new evidence, this book is recommended to anyone who loves to dive down a rabbit hole.
Publishers Weekly Review
Gone at Midnight : The Tragic True Story Behind the Unsolved Internet Sensation
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Investigative journalist Anderson looks into the case of 21-year-old Elisa Lam, a student diagnosed as bipolar who vanished from L.A.'s seedy Cecil Hotel one day in 2013, in this outstanding debut. As days went by, residents of the hotel began to complain about the water quality and pressure. Finally, a maintenance worker went to the roof to check the hotel's cisterns, only to find Lam's naked, dead body floating in one of them. The coroner ruled her death an accident by drowning with bipolar disorder a contributing factor. But Anderson found too many inconsistencies in the case, and the internet went wild with conspiracy theories. Lam was no stranger to the blogging world, having a Tumblr account where she documented her mental health problems and where her scheduled updates appeared for months after her death. That Anderson's obsession with the case led him to examine his own mental health issues adds depth. He ponders whether it was suicide or a psychotic breakdown--or something more sinister that killed Lam. Anderson also vividly details the dark delusions he suffered while making a documentary at the Cecil Hotel. What really happened to Lam may never be known, but true crime buffs won't want to miss this gripping search for the truth. (Mar.)