I'm currently listening to Sarah Vowell's book on tape Assassination Vacation, in which she travels to various historical sites related to assassinations in the USA, notably Lincoln and McKinley, etc., but scrupulously avoids JFK, RFK, MLK, Malcolm X or Medgar Evers.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=A...G=Google+Search
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_Vacation
http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id...5&ct=result
As a National Public Broadcasting journalist who reports on whimiscal things, she has an interesting approach and brings herself into the story, but apparently she can only deal with what's history and not what's really the cutting edge of crimes and mysteries.
She gave me the idea, and having left it out of her own book, to approach the JFK and other recent assassinations from the perspective of boots on the ground, visiting cities and sites of relevance, and see if there's anything left of evidential value or anyone left who was there at the time.
The recent issue of Dealey Plaza Echo (which has a number of interesting articles -cheers to those across the pond who put it together) as posted at Mary Ferrell (Thanks Rex), including a guided tour of the New Orleans neighborhoods frequented by Oswald and other suspects, though they don't include the Magazine St. Apartment, Jim Braden's apartment, the Pierre Marquette office building, or a number of significant sites.
Cruising About the Cresent City by Terry Moore:
http://www.maryferrell.org/mffweb/archive/...sPageId=1191695
Dealey Plaza is the second most visited tourist site in Texas, after the Alamo, which was saved by a bunch of old ladies who got together and preserved it), and Histoiric Tourism is now a niche that's figured into the tourists economy.
Besides, New Orleans and Dallas, I also thought that DC, Mexico City, New York, Philadelphia, Miami and other cities are on the Assassin's Tour.
Of course I would need a native guide to places I'm not familiar with, and I would need input from those who live there or know an area intimately, and feedback from people who can add tidbits of information that gives better insight into the sites of assassinations.
While I am primarily interested in the JFK assassination, the approach can also be used to visit other assassination sites, like Memphis, where they have a museum.
Before embarking on this trip and wasting a lot of time on it, I thought I'd see if there was any interest in this approach among other forum members.
Thanks for your opinions,
BK
