I stumbled upon 'Starvation Heights' a few years ago while browsing for historical true crime books, and let me tell you, it's one of those stories that lingers in your mind long after you finish reading. Written by Gregg Olsen, it meticulously documents the horrifying case of Linda Hazzard, a so-called 'fasting specialist' who operated in early 20th-century Washington. The book reads like a nightmare—patients starved to death under her care, and she profited from their suffering. Olsen's research is thorough, blending court records, newspaper archives, and personal accounts to reconstruct the events. What makes it especially chilling is how Hazzard manipulated vulnerable people with pseudoscientific claims about 'fasting cures.' I found myself flipping back to the photos of her 'sanitarium,' a place that looked more like a prison than a clinic. If you're into dark history or true crime, this one's a must-read—just maybe not before bedtime.
One thing that struck me was how Hazzard's story mirrors modern wellness scams. Even today, we see charlatans peddling dangerous 'miracle' treatments, though thankfully with more oversight. The book also made me wonder about the thin line between alternative medicine and exploitation. Olsen doesn't sensationalize; he lets the facts speak for themselves, which makes the cruelty even more stark. After reading, I dove into old Seattle newspaper archives out of curiosity—turns out the case was huge locally, with dramatic headlines like 'Fast Doctor Faces Jury.' It's wild how this piece of history feels both distant and eerily relevant.
Gregg Olsen's 'Starvation Heights' feels like stepping into a time machine set to 'horror mode.' Linda Hazzard's sanitarium wasn't just a medical fraud; it was a house of horrors disguised as a wellness retreat. The details—like patients chewing on leather to stave off hunger—stick with you. What fascinated me was Hazzard's charisma; she convinced people to pay for their own torture. Olsen's pacing is masterful, balancing clinical facts with human stories. After reading, I couldn't help but research more about the 'fasting craze' of the era—turns out, Hazzard was just one extreme in a spectrum of dangerous health fads. A grim but compelling slice of history.
As a true crime enthusiast, I devoured 'Starvation Heights' in two sittings—partly because it's gripping, partly because I needed to finish it before I lost my nerve. Linda Hazzard's crimes are so brazen they almost defy belief. She wasn't some shadowy figure; she published books advocating starvation as therapy and even had supporters. The most haunting detail? How she forged wills to inherit her victims' estates. Olsen paints a vivid picture of the era, where quack medicine thrived due to limited regulation and public desperation. I kept thinking about Dora Williamson, one of the survivors, whose testimony helped bring Hazzard down. Her courage contrasts sharply with the doctor's monstrous greed.
The book also raises questions about complicity. How did neighbors ignore the emaciated patients? Why did it take so long to shut her down? It's a testament to Olsen's skill that he turns a historical account into a suspenseful narrative. Side note: I later learned this inspired an episode of 'drunk History,' which somehow made the story both darker and darkly humorous. If you pick this up, brace yourself—it's heavier than your average true crime read.
2025-11-15 22:10:08
28
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Orphans of Blue Ridge
Diana Sockriter
8
7.3K
An alpha protects them all… At least, a real one does.
Twelve years ago friend and fellow alpha, Hunter and Melina Blue, lost their lives when their beta orchestrated a massive coup. Ten years ago Alpha Demetri Black was forced to close his borders to keep the violent rogues that took over at bay. Today, the original members of the Blue Ridge pack are dwindling and fear for their lives. Desperate for an alpha to help them, they dare to cross the border into the territory of a killer, at least that’s what Alpha Black is rumored to be; merciless. It’s only when his son attacks and severely injures the remaining member of Blue Ridge’s warriors that the pack’s trespassing comes to Demetri’s attention as does Damian’s deep hatred for helping the pack that couldn’t help themselves. Will Damian’s attitude change when he discovers the truth behind the Blue Ridge pack? Will Alpha Demetri be the alpha they need? The one who protects them all?
Welcome back to the Crimson Dawn pack with the third emotional book in the series.
Content warning: This book contains descriptions of mental, physical and sexual abuse that sensitive readers may find disturbing. For adult readers only.
After my SATs are over, I go to the office block with my poverty certificate to apply for a school loan.
The staff member glances at my paperwork before turning my application down coldly.
"To think that you're already swindling loans from the government at such a young age! High-income families like yours aren't lacking in the money department at all!"
At first, I think this is just a misunderstanding. That is, until the staff member passes me the information on my parents.
"Your parents have a villa worth 20 million dollars in the city center, whereas your younger brother goes to an elite academy that costs 800 thousand dollars' worth of tuition fees per year!
"Tell me, how can someone from your family be eligible to apply for a school loan?"
I'm stunned, to say the least.
The entire village has raised me since young. For the past 18 years, I've been the only child of an extremely impoverished family.
Little do I know that my parents have already formed another family of their own in the city…
After fifteen years away, I was finally brought back to the DeLuca family.
I thought I was returning to my real home.
Instead, I walked into a house where the adopted daughter wanted me dead, my father treated me like a burden, and my brothers would rather watch me bleed than make her cry.
On my first day back, she set dogs on me.
That night, I was dragged to the top of the observatory and forced to apologize to her.
When I fell from the tower covered in blood, they still called me a liar.
Because in the DeLuca family, I may have been the real daughter by blood—
but she was the daughter they loved.
She thought she could bully me, poison me, and freeze me to death without consequence.
She was wrong.
Because the night I nearly died, my mother finally chose me—and turned a gun on the whole DeLuca family.
Five years ago, my family died in a car crash.
My parents. My adopted sister, Liz. Everyone but me.
They left behind grief, an empty house, and a debt so large it swallowed my life.
When the collectors came, I turned to the only person I had left—my husband, Adrian.
He told me he had cut ties with his own family to marry me and had nothing left.
I believed him.
For five years, I worked every job I could find, paid every dollar I earned, and told myself love was worth the suffering.
When the balance dropped to its final $18,000, I signed up for a paid drug trial at a private clinic.
They handed me a waiver, warned me about possible delayed reactions, and promised fast money if I swallowed the experimental dose.
I thought it would buy us a new beginning.
Instead, I came home early and heard Adrian on the phone.
“Let Liz use the card. Evelyn still doesn’t know. She took away Liz’s money five years ago, so she has to earn every dollar back herself.”
Then he laughed softly.
“One more year, and her punishment is over.”
That was how I learned the dead were alive.
The debt was fake.
My husband had never been poor.
And the life I had fought so hard to survive was only a sentence they had given me.
When Covid hits, the Thomas Family decided to pack up their lives in the city and move to Buttershire, to the family mansion on the hill. But there is a secret to the mansion, that no one told the family when they got the keys. Whilst the adults seem oblivious to what is happening around them, the teenage knows that the clock is ticking. What they discover is truly not for the faint of heart.
How painful is it to grow in the oppressive bitter cold? Is it because the desire for revenge is so intense?
For the sake of love, Christabel's life became turbulent in an abysmal way. She never knew falling in love was a great crime until she found herself in a situation that made her doubt her love, not giving her a chance, her life was destroyed within the range of five months.
She dreaded the emotion 'love' and its accomplice.
All hell was let loose when her cunning enemy sent her to a place a sane human will not dare spent a second in. Her stepsister will not stop until she collects something she believed she snatched from her. As if that was not enough, she was accused of murder and was cast out by the person she so much respected.
No dulling! Life is hotness for hotness and coldness for coldness. It is a time to be brave and sharp; like the biblical-edged swords.
She decided to show the other side of the by taking revenge! Prove her innocence and regain her lost pride.
The question here is, is she innocent? Who is the real murderer? Will she be courageous In the face of all these adversities? Will all these come to a full cessation? What is her fate amid this chaos? Will her lovely mum and mentally handicapped sister be able to save her despite them being poor? Will her life be ever meaningful?
Back when I first heard people whispering about 'Harmony Heights', I assumed it was ripped straight from someone's diary. After digging through interviews, production notes, and a bunch of fan forums, my take is that it's more of an inspired-by-true-events situation than a literal retelling. The creators pulled real textures from small-town life—old storefronts, school rivalries, and the way secrets fester in tight-knit communities—then stitched those textures onto a fictional townscape. That gives the show an authentic feel without tying it to a single, traceable incident.
From what I can tell, the characters are composites: bits of real people, blended and exaggerated for drama. Scenes that feel eerily specific are often dramatized or time-compressed. There are a few named incidents in the show that match headlines from a particular region, but those headlines have been altered for narrative punch and to protect privacy. The writers also admitted to adding symbolic and supernatural elements that never happened in real life, which tells you they were chasing mood as much as accuracy.
I love that balance. Knowing that 'Harmony Heights' isn't a strict documentary lets me enjoy the storytelling choices while appreciating the real-world threads that inspired them. It reads like someone lovingly remixing reality into fiction, and for me that blend hits a sweet spot between familiarity and imagination.
One of the most chilling books I've ever picked up is 'Starvation Heights' by Gregg Olsen. It's a nonfiction deep dive into a horrifying true crime case from early 20th-century Washington. The book chronicles Dr. Linda Hazzard's 'fasting cure,' which was basically a torture regimen disguised as medicine. What gets me is how Olsen reconstructs the victims' experiences—you can feel their desperation and the slow, cruel betrayal. The fact that Hazzard got away with it for so long because people trusted her medical credentials makes it even more unsettling.
I recommend pairing it with other true crime medical horrors like 'The Devil in the White City.' There's something especially terrifying about predators who exploit hope. The book left me staring at my shelf for a good ten minutes afterward, just processing how easily charisma can mask evil.
The House of Hunger' by Dambudzo Marechera is a fascinating piece of literature that blurs the lines between reality and fiction. While it isn't a direct retelling of a specific true story, it's deeply rooted in the author's own experiences growing up in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) during a turbulent era. Marechera's raw, fragmented writing style mirrors the chaos of post-colonial Africa, and the book's themes of alienation, violence, and societal decay feel intensely personal. I've always been struck by how autobiographical elements seep into the narrative—like the protagonist's struggles with identity and education, which mirror Marechera's own life. It's less about factual accuracy and more about emotional truth, capturing the dissonance of a generation caught between collapsing systems.
That said, calling it 'based on a true story' might oversimplify it. The book leans into surrealism and hyperbole, twisting reality to amplify its message. If you're looking for a historical account, this isn't it—but if you want a visceral, poetic reflection of a fractured world, it's unparalleled. Marechera's genius lies in how he turns his lived pain into something universal, making the story feel truer than mere facts ever could.