The San Francisco Chronicle hailed Robert Graysmith's Zodiac as "provocative...the taut narrative brings the horror back jolt upon jolt."
And that wasn't even the whole story.
When the Zodiac killings began in 1968, Robert Graysmith, employed at the San Francisco Chronicle, became fascinated with the case. Before the murder spree was over, Zodiac claimed 37 victims. His mocking notes to authorities dared them to catch him. They never did. Now after following the clues for thirty years, Graysmith provides the final chapter-with hundreds of never-before-published photos and the only complete reproduction of the Zodiac letters.
Robert Graysmith devoted a lot of time to the Zodiac case. So much that he is considered an authority on the matter.Rightfully so....
The problem with his identifying the killer is the fact that there are bloody fingerprints taken into evidence from Paul Stine's cab. Those prints haven't been matched to a suspect. An interesting book from a psychiatric point is "This is Zodiac Speaking".