Forever and Five Days

| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.93 (564 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0786022272 |
| Format Type | : | paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 320 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2017-02-04 |
| Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
A must read for all long term care workers Amazon Customer As a health care worker living in Grand Rapids, Michigan, I had to read this one! I remember some of the details from that time, but had to read the book to fully understand all the odd behaviors. Very well written. Yes, truth IS stranger than fiction! You never know who you are working along side of.. Marvelous Depiction of True Evil! The author has done a brilliant job of creating for us a nightmarish true-life series of murders in a nursing home. We've all read occasional news stories of some nursing home employee or hospital worker being imprisoned for serially killing off patients. In this book, though, we're led to the evolution of two mentally unstable women who became l. "Aristocracy Comes to Grand Rapids" according to Dan Bogaty. Admit it. For years now you've had a wistful yearning for a true crime story featuring a Aristocracy Comes to Grand Rapids Admit it. For years now you've had a wistful yearning for a true crime story featuring a 300 pound, manipulative, bleached blond lesbian narcissist.And in your dreams, said narcissist, an aide at a Grand Rapids, MI. nursing home, would orchestrate a relentlessly out of control sleaze-athon in which her co-workers - many of them married women with. 00 pound, manipulative, bleached blond lesbian narcissist.And in your dreams, said narcissist, an aide at a Grand Rapids, MI. nursing home, would orchestrate a relentlessly out of control sleaze-athon in which her co-workers - many of them married women with
By the author of Masquerade.. An account of the life and crimes of Catherine May Wood and Gwendolyn Gail Graham describes how the two lovers who worked the nightshift at a nursing home in Grand Rapids, Michigan, killed six patients in cold blood
. Gwen was the pug-nosed newcomer with a little girl's dependency and desire to please: she doted on Cathy, and was honored to be chosen as her lover. They turned a respected Michigan nursing home into their playground for frivolous games and practical jokes. Lowell Cauffiel does a good job of letting us into their lives, and into the world of make-believe that allowed these murders to go unnoticed for so long. It's a story with a large cast of characters--the employees of the nursing home, the individual patients and their loving families, the outsiders who wondered and worried. Then Cathy got worried that Gwen was cheating on her, so she suggested a love pact that would bind them together "forever and five days." Gwen carried out her wishes, and smothered five patients in their beds. Cathy
