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A Death In White Bear Lake
A Death In White Bear Lake
Author: Barry Siegel
On Palm Sunday, 1965, a little boy died of peritonitis in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. He was three and a half years old, and his name was Dennis Jurgens. — Barry Siegel's extraordinary book is the true story of Dennis, his adoptive parents, Lois and Harold Jurgens, his natural mother, Jerry Sherwood, and the many others in the town of White Bear ...  more »
ISBN: 200689
Publication Date: 1990
Pages: 448
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Publisher: Bantam
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
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Read All 4 Book Reviews of "A Death In White Bear Lake"

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reviewed A Death In White Bear Lake on + 2 more book reviews
I did enjoy reading this book. The subject matter and descriptions are difficult at times but the story held my interest. The development of a city and the law and attitudes was very interesting to read about. I also enjoy the way BARRY SIEGEL writes.
reviewed A Death In White Bear Lake on + 11 more book reviews
From Publishers Weekly
This is a masterfully depicted true-crime tale of the murder of a child by his adoptive mother and the resolution of the case 27 years later. In 1980 Jerry Sherwood, who had given her first child up for adoption, searched for him only to discover that Dennis had died at age three in 1965 under mysterious circumstances. Her accusations prodded the town of White Bear Lake in Wisconsin, which had already suspected adoptive mother Lois Jurgens of killing the child, into action. The resultant trial, a landmark case, established the legal principle that circumstantial evidence is sufficient to convict in a child-abuse case, and served to reinforce the now commonly accepted contention that those abused as children frequently become child abusers themselves. Jurgens is now in prison. This perceptive analysis of the case by a Los Angeles Times reporter is stirring. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal
Using nonfiction novel style, Los Angeles Times reporter Siegel tells the story of Harold and Lois Jurgens, a Minnesota couple who adopted two children and beat the younger one, Dennis, to death in 1963. The Jurgens later adopted four more children, all of whom were also abused. Lois Jurgens was successfully prosecuted for third-degree murder after Dennis's natural mother came looking for her son and expressed suspicions about his death, 22 years after it happened. Drawing from many sources, Siegel has produced a well-written account of a particularly troubling child abuse case. He also provides some informative commentary on the failure of society--in particular its social service, legal, and medical systems--to protect its children from abuse. Recommended for public libraries.
- Donna L. Miller, Lebanon Valley Coll. Lib., Annville, Pa.
reviewed A Death In White Bear Lake on + 115 more book reviews
On Palm Sunday 1965, Dennis died. His three-and-a half year old body bore multiple injuries. But the coroner never ruled on the actual cause of death. Dennis was just buried-that was all. This is a story of a child who was slain in the American heartland among decent, normal neighbors.It is about people like us, and how they acted-or failed to act-at a critical moment in their lives.

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