Too Late to Say Goodbye Audiobook
Too Late to Say Goodbye Audiobook
- Barbara Caruso
- Simon & Schuster Audio
- 2011-01-04
- 12 h 30 min
Summary:
From bestselling author Ann Rule comes the engrossing true story of two beautiful, loving ladies, and their murder by the person within their life-handsome, charming, full, a guy marked for unlimited success-but person who would never allow any girl to leave him, no real matter what the provocation.
Jenn Corbin, a pleasant, slim, brown-eyed blonde, appeared to have it all: two dear little guys, a posh house in one of the upscale suburbs of Atlanta, expensive cars, a plush houseboat, and a husband-Dr. Bart about As well Late to Say Goodbye Corbin, a successful dentist-who was tall, handsome, and amazing.
But gradually their seemingly idyllic lifestyle together began to crumble. There is talk of viewing a married relationship counselor. Bart was distraught; Jenn appeared disenchanted. She needed to get in touch with somebody she could confide in-beyond her mom and her sisters. After that, just a few weeks before Xmas 2004, Jenn was discovered dead having a bullet in her head, a revolver beside her. From the positioning of your body her death were a suicide. But Gwinnett State detective Marcus Head had not been totally convinced, nor was Jenn’s family, who could not believe she would take her own life.
And exactly how was this death related to another apparent suicide fourteen years earlier-that of Dorothy ‘Dolly’ Hearn, a spectacularly beautiful dental student? A celebrity athlete and homecoming queen in high school, Dolly later dated Bart Corbin in dental care school. Was there an association, or was the answer to be within a secret-even dangerous-relationship Jenn Corbin was having outside her relationship? For Too Late to Say Goodbye, Ann Rule has interviewed practically everyone at all related to the story-the victims’ family members, police investigators, prosecutors, and resources from Georgia to Australia-to uncover the reality behind the headlines of the two sensational deaths. What emerges is an incredible story of jealous trend; of stunning circumstantial and physical evidence that runs from the steamy to the macabre to almost-unheard-of forensic methods; and of a tragic irony-a fateful discovery that motivated the eliminating. The definitive unraveling of one from the strangest murder investigations of our period, Too Late to state Goodbye could very well be the finest accomplishment of a great writer’s profession.