RACHEL MCCARTHY JAMES was born and raised in Kansas, the daughter of baseball's Bill James and artist Susan McCarthy. She graduated from Hollins University in Roanoke, VA, where she studied writing and politics. Her first nonfiction book, The Man from the Train, was written in collaboration with her father and published in 2017. She lives with her husband Jason and pets in Lawrence, KS.
Put a handle on a blade and the possibilities are endless?for execution, political gain, military prowess, wanton violence. And now, in McCarthy James's expert grip, for narrative thrills! As sharply honed as its subject matter, Whack Job will leave you wanting more. * Mary Roach, New York Times bestselling author of Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers * Who'd have thought that a book about axe murder could be such a delightful read? But thanks to the irrepressible, knowing voice of Rachel McCarthy James, Whack Job is a tour guide through some of history's darkest corners, where the choice of one particular weapon, evolving over time, stands in for the full, messy, bloody spectrum of human behavior. * Sarah Weinman, author of The Real Lolita and Scoundrel * Rachel McCarthy James seizes on the humble axe to cut a fresh, wildly original trail through some 500,000 years of human history. This is lively storytelling with a delightfully wicked edge. * Daniel Stashower, New York Times bestselling author of American Demon * A lively, surprising, always-engaging exploration of a simple tool and the very complicated things that human beings do with it. If you like your true crime witty, sharp (in all senses of the word!) and historically informed, this is the book for you. * Rachel Monroe, author of Savage Appetites * In Rachel McCarthy James's Whack Job, the story of axe murder is the story of so much more. While first and foremost this is a book about the axe and its most nefarious uses, it's also a book about gender, class, and the machinations of power in human society. From the (likely) first prehistoric axe murder, to the myth of George Washington's cherry tree, to Jack Nicholson in The Shining, McCarthy James has provided her readers with a thorough yet entertaining epic of the simplest of tools. Whack Job is a brisk and lively history that mines surprising conclusions from the humble axe. * Danny Caine, author of How to Resist Amazon and Why * In Whack Job, McCarthy James leads us through half-million years of human life, from the Middle Pleistocene to the present, chronicling ever-changing societal and technological advancements?all through the prism of one of civilization's earliest-known weapons. Whack Job is an entirely fresh perspective on global history, and also accomplishes the neat trick of being an entertaining delight. * Elon Green, author of Last Call * [A] fun, snappy, and richly researched history... McCarthy James helps us understand the axe as a tool intimately tied to both survival and violent death throughout human existence. Who knew reading about 430,000 year-old head trauma could be this fun? * Gabrielle Moss, author of Paperback Crush * Gleefully grisly ... a bit of macabre fun. * Publishers Weekly * An engrossing historical analysis. * Booklist * Intriguing ... sure to provide a little something for a wide range of readers * Library Journal * What's not to love about a brief history of axe murders that's part true crime, part anthropology, part material history? Going all the way back to the crude, pre-historic hand axe (basically a sharp rock), McCarthy James examines how easily a tool becomes a weapon, and why we find it so compelling * Lithub * Whack Job chronicles the bloody and fascinating history of this versatile tool and the people who wield it * New York Times *