The Crime Novelist Who Wrote His Own Death Scene He was a powerfully built man, six feet tall and two hundred pounds, with thick, dark hair, a prominent nose, piercing eyes, and an intensity that electrified some people and intimidated others. On December 7, 1996, he committed suicide in a spectacular fashion, after leaving a trail of clues designed to lead the police and the public to conclude that he'd been murdered by an Indiana militia group. For a while, his colleagues in the midwestern chapter of the Mystery Writers of America—novelists whose minds run in winding channels of plots and conspiracies—bought into his fiction. Within hours after he'd been found hanging out the window of his fourteenth-floor office in Chicago's Loop, they began issuing statements that Izzi, who had a reputation for taking risks to gather material for his novels, could not have died by his own hand. The ever-competitive Chicago media printed and broadcast these pronouncements, and soon Izzi's death had become a whodunit, with all the melodramatic elements of the potboilers he wrote.
Even Izzi's closest friend, a man he called his brother, inadvertently fed the wild speculation: "There is no question that Guy [as Izzi's friends called him] was in the midst of investigating certain individuals at the time of his death—that's beyond dispute," Andrew Vachss, a New York lawyer and a crime novelist in his own right, told the Chicago Sun-Times. "You don't wrap yourself in a Kevlar vest and carry a handgun if you're relaxed about the environment around you. He was completely sane and dedicated to his craft, which happened to mean digging up dirt."
Izzi was wearing a bulletproof vest when he died and had been carrying a .38-caliber revolver for weeks. The fully loaded gun was found on his office floor when Chicago police and firemen recovered his body. They also discovered other items in his trouser pockets and in the pockets of his blue winter overcoat: brass knuckles, a can of Mace, three computer diskettes, a couple of threatening notes containing the words danger and beware, and the transcript of a phone call that had been left on his voice mail. In the days before his death, Izzi had played the message for anyone whose ear he could grab. At least half a dozen people had heard the halting female voice say that Izzi's infiltration of the Indiana militia had been discovered; he'd been tried by a kangaroo court and sentenced to die by "a flaming rope." 16 Aviator Sunglasses That'll Instantly Upgrade Your Warm-Weather Style Everyone looks cooler in sunglasses. That's just a fact of life. 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That's what comes from throwing a toddler (and all his stuff) into a Brooklyn apartment already stuffed with overcoats and knitwear and sneakers and jeans, the collections of each of which I just swear I'm going to properly thin down one day. These are my issues; yours may be entirely different. But after a year-plus stuck inside and shopping online, there's a decent chance you, too, are in need of some extra storage. Or maybe you just need a thoroughly trusty travel bag. Maybe both. Thankfully, Bennett Winch's Cargo Range of extra-tough, extra-large bags is out there. And it's proven invaluable in keeping all my stuff in (relative) order at home and on the road." It's Time to Totally Reconsider the Classic Navy Blazer It's a funny thing, the navy, gold-buttoned blazer. Once the pillar of sartorial correctness with a definite nod to the Anglo-Saxon, it signaled to certain people that, off-duty, you belonged often to a sporting club as obscure and impenetrable as the first few episodes of Twin Peaks: The Return. Then, everything—in fashion, at least—started to chill. In the past 20 years, things have eased to such a degree in America that even the dressiest clothes have all but lost their elitist signifiers, largely because we pretty much just stopped caring about them. But, at the same time, they've lost none of their charm in the interim. Key to inverting the trad blazer, however, is that it only really works if its provenance, its construction, and its proportions are proper in the actual old-school sense. Andy Warhol knew that when he danced in his at Studio 54, while Serge Gainsbourg was a past master at ruffling establishment feathers with his disheveled oui-oui-I-indeed-slept-in-le-hedge take on it. 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Sunday, May 09, 2021
The Crime Novelist Who Wrote His Own Death
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