Totally get the curiosity—true crime and historical accounts like this one are gripping. While I haven’t found a full free version online, you might piece together details through news archives or documentaries about the event. Sometimes authors share excerpts on blogs or forums, too. Worth a deep dive!
Finding free online copies of books like 'Remembering the Cokeville Elementary School Bombing' can be tricky, especially for niche or locally significant titles. I've spent hours digging through digital libraries and obscure forums trying to track down similar books—sometimes you get lucky with platforms like Open Library or Archive.org, but often, these works aren't widely digitized. If it's a memoir or community-focused account, checking the author's website or local historical societies might yield a PDF or scanned chapters. Publishers also occasionally offer limited free previews through Google Books or Amazon's 'Look Inside' feature.
That said, I'd temper expectations. Smaller-scale publications rarely have the same digital footprint as bestsellers. If you strike out, libraries or interloan services could be your best bet. I once found a rare out-of-print book through a university library’s special collections—librarians are gold mines for this stuff! The hunt can be frustrating, but stumbling on that elusive text feels like uncovering buried treasure.
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The Price of Peace is the final showdown and book three for the No Regrets crew, where the masks come off and the bills finally come due. Shane O’Brien is done playing house. He’s been living his life like a "glorified roommate" with his wife, Isla, ever since she broke their vows with her best friend's husband, but now the cold war is turning hot. While Shane finds a temporary sanctuary with Maya Cruz, Isla is weaponizing their children trying to save a marriage that might already be lost, but will she realize this too late, or burn the whole house down. Speaking of Maya, she has a few secrets of her own, one that involves Mayor Rogers and a scandal that could level the city.
In the courtroom, Crandon Morgan is fighting to keep his name clean after a very public mental meltdown. He’s looking for a comeback, but he finds a distraction in Tempest Summers, a new law junior associate with a haunted past and a hunger for a kind of justice the law books don’t cover.
Meanwhile, Kole Michaels is trapped in a different kind of nightmare. A past mistake named Akeisha is using a legal loophole to pin a child named Urmagisty on him. With his relationship with a different Keisha on the line and his daughter Mabel watching, Kole has to prove he’s being set up before the lie becomes his life.
In this game, peace isn't free, you have to pay for it in blood, truth, or with everything you own.
On the seventh day after my daughter goes missing, I kidnap an entire kindergarten. I lock away all 27 students and two teachers in a classroom.
I tell the police that if they can't find my daughter, I will kill a kid every 30 minutes.
The principal falls to her knees, wailing and begging, "It's not my fault that your daughter is missing. Why should other children pay for it?"
I glance at my watch. "29 minutes left. Find her."
I know she's in this kindergarten.
Outside the police tape surrounding a fancy hotel, a police officer can be seen blocking my way.
"There seems to be a bomb hidden in the hotel! Unauthorized personnel are not allowed to get any closer!"
I'm just about to dig out my work badge when the intern next to me, Christine Wyatt, covers her mouth in a pretentiously shocked manner.
"Officer, there's a detonator and a timer in his bag! Those things look so scary!"
The entire scene goes eerily silent. Almost immediately, I see a few guns getting aimed at my forehead.
Anxiety begins overwhelming me. "I'm a bomb disposal expert from the Headquarters Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit! My bag contains all the tools necessary to dispose of a bomb!"
"Throw your bag over to me and keep your hands where I can see them!" Captain Scott Hunter roars at me.
My bag is opened afterward. Things like an insulated cutter, a bomb suppression blanket, and a liquid nitrogen cooling tank are scattered across the ground.
Before I can explain myself, Christine suddenly points at me while screaming, "Why are you still playing dumb? You just told me that you wanted to set off an explosion in that hotel!
"What, now that the police are here, you dare not admit what you just said, huh? You're a terrorist through and through!"
Scott reacts quickly by pinning me on the hood of the police cruiser with my hands folded behind my back.
"We're taking you back for a thorough interrogation!"
My heart almost stops at those words.
The bomb that's packed with enough firepower to take out half a street has already gone on a countdown in the hotel lobby. But I, the only bomb disposal expert who can get rid of the bomb, have handcuffs put on me because of Christine's nonsensical accusations.
Right now, there are only 29 minutes left before the bomb goes off.
My wife, Caroline Bailey, was a forensic pathologist. For her first love, Ian Lawson, she was willing to break every rule she held sacred and allowed him into the autopsy room to observe. She even let him throw acid onto a corpse's face.
That was, until Caroline took on a new case. As she stood over the disfigured body on her operating table, she began to fall apart.
The acid-burned face was starting to look more and more like mine.
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In the end, I inhaled too much toxic gas and died, never having waited long enough for the rescue team to arrive.
Since I was the only one who had mastered the core data of the lab, no one could take my place. This meant that five years of hard work in the lab were destroyed, and Astran University was kicked out of a global research project.
Later, William, the once esteemed professor of Astran University, became a pariah—someone whom everyone scorned and reviled.
When the earthquake struck on what should have been our fourth wedding anniversary, my supposedly devoted and family-oriented husband, Lionel Brooks, abandoned me and our children, who were trapped under the rubble.
Despite our children's pleas for help, Lionel left without a second thought, carrying his former flame, Fiona Smith, and her daughter to safety. While Fiona and her daughter escaped with minor injuries, my precious children had their chests pierced by steel beams, leaving this world forever.
It was such a twisted fate. What was meant to be a day of celebration turned into an annual day of mourning for my beautiful children.
A week later, during my children's funeral, Lionel had the audacity to call and ask which hospital the kids were in. It was laughable—after ensuring Fiona and her child were comfortable and safe, he finally found time to check on his flesh and blood.
I could only say, "You finally remembered your children after a whole week? Lionel, I hope you rot in hell."
I love digging around for legitimate ways to read things for free, so here's the practical route I usually take. If you want to read 'Columbine' online without paying, your best legal bet is your public library's digital services — think Libby/OverDrive or Hoopla. I find those apps have surprisingly good collections and you can borrow ebooks and audiobooks with just a library card. Many libraries also participate in interlibrary loan, so if your branch doesn't have 'Columbine' they can often get it for you in another format.
If the library route doesn't pan out, check Google Books for previews or samples from the publisher, and the publisher's website sometimes posts the first chapter or an excerpt. There's also the Internet Archive/Open Library lending program: you can borrow a scanned copy for a limited time if it's available through their controlled digital lending system. I use that occasionally and it saved me money while keeping things aboveboard. Happy reading — this book hits heavy, so have a cup of tea and some quiet time ready.
Man, I get why people are curious about dark topics like Columbine—it's a mix of morbid fascination and trying to understand something so tragic. While 'The Columbine High-School Massacre' isn't a single book, there are tons of articles, documentaries, and even survivor accounts online. You can find free PDFs of books like Dave Cullen's 'Columbine' on some sketchy sites, but honestly? I’d recommend supporting the authors or checking your local library’s digital lending.
Reading about real-life horrors hits different than fiction. It’s heavy stuff, and sometimes I wonder if diving too deep into it does more harm than good. But if you’re researching, stick to reputable sources—avoid the conspiracy rabbit holes. They’re not just disrespectful; they’re downright dangerous.