Events
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Start: 5:30 pm
End: 7:00 pm
Wednesday, September 5th
5:30-7PM
A CASE FOR SOLOMON: BOBBY DUNBAR AND THE KIDNAPPING
THAT HAUNTED A NATION chronicles one of the most celebrated—and most
misunderstood—kidnapping cases in American history. In 1912, four-year-old Bobby
Dunbar, the son of an upper-middle-class Louisiana family, went missing in the
swamps. After an eight-month search that electrified the country and destroyed
Bobby’s parents, the boy was found, filthy and hardly recognizable, in the
pinewoods of southern Mississippi. A wandering piano tuner who had been
shuttling the child throughout the region by wagon for months was arrested and
charged with kidnapping—a crime that was punishable by death at the time. But
when a destitute single mother came forward from North Carolina to claim the boy
as her son, not Bobby Dunbar, the case became a high-pitched battle over
custody—and identity—that divided the South.
Amid an ever-thickening tangle of suspicion and doubt, two mothers and a
father struggled to assert their rightful parenthood over the child, both to the
public and to themselves. For two years, lawyers dissected and newspapers
sensationalized every aspect of the story. Psychiatrists, physicians,
criminologists, and private detectives debated the piano tuner’s guilt and the
boy’s identity. And all the while the boy himself remained peculiarly guarded on
the question of who he was. It took nearly a century, a curiosity that had been
passed down through generations, and the science of DNA to discover the truth.
A Case for Solomon is a gripping historical mystery, distilled from a
trove of personal and archival research. The story of Bobby Dunbar, fought over
by competing New Orleans tabloids, the courts, and the citizenry of two states,
offers a case study in yellow journalism, emergent forensic science, and
criminal justice in the turn-of-the-century American South. It is a drama of raw
poverty and power and an exposé of how that era defined and defended motherhood,
childhood, and community. First told in a stunning episode of National Public
Radio’s This American Life, A Case for Solomon chronicles the epic
struggle to determine one child’s identity, along the way probing unsettling
questions about the formation of memory, family, and self.
Tal
McThenia and Margaret Dunbar Cutright are discussing and signing
their book,
A Case For Solomon: Bobby Spencer and the Kidnapping That Haunted a
Nation.
If
you are unable to attend, you must call the book shop to order signed
books.
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