Age Group:
AdultsProgram Description
Event Details
This year, OBOSC will host Patricia L. Bryan and Thomas Wolf, authors of Midnight Assassin, a non-fiction account of Margaret Hossack, an Iowa farm wife accused of murdering her husband in 1900. They will discuss their research of the investigation into the crime and the murder trial.
Registration is recommended
Register for the author event with Bryan and Wolf or submit questions for the authors. This event will be held on the campus of Northwest Iowa Community College on Thursday, November 3, at 7pm.
About the Book Midnight Assassin
On a moonlit night in December 1900, a prosperous Iowa farmer was murdered in his bed–killed by two blows of an ax to his head. Four days later, the victim’s wife, Margaret Hossack, was arrested at her husband’s funeral and charged with the crime.
The vicious assault stunned and divided the close-knit rural community. The accused woman claimed to be innocent, but stories of domestic troubles and abuse provided prosecutors with a motive for the crime. Neighbors and family members were reluctant to talk about what they knew concerning the couple’s troubled marriage.
Midnight Assassin takes us back to the murder, the investigation, and the trials of Margaret Hossack. The book introduces us to Susan Glaspell, a young journalist who reported the story for the Des Moines Daily News and fifteen years later transformed the events into the classic one-act play, “Trifles”, and the acclaimed short story, “A Jury of Her Peers.”
Patricia L. Bryan and Thomas Wolf researched the Hossack case for almost a decade, combing through the legal records, newspaper accounts, government documents, and unpublished memoirs. The result is a vivid portrait of life in rural America at the turn-of-the century and a chilling step-by-step account of the crime and its aftermath.
About the Authors Patricia L. Bryan and Tom Wolf
Patricia L. Bryan is the Henry P. Brandis Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, where she has taught classes in Federal Income Tax and a seminar in Law and Literature. She has degrees from Carleton College (B.A.), the University of Iowa (J.D.), and New York University (Masters in Tax). She has been a visiting professor at Stanford Law School and the University of Iowa College of Law.
Bryan is the co-author of Midnight Assassin: A Murder in America’s Heartland and the co-editor of Her America, a collection of stories by Susan Glaspell. Bryan has written and spoken extensively about Glaspell’s work. She has investigated several criminal cases from the 19th century and has published articles about them in the Stanford Law Review and the Annals of Iowa. Bryan has also researched and written about the public financing for sports stadiums.
Thomas Wolf was born, raised, and educated in the Midwest. After graduation from Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois, and a two-year stint as a VISTA volunteer on Long Island, he earned an MFA in Fiction Writing from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. He is a two-time winner of the Doris Betts Fiction Prize and the co-author of Midnight Assassin: A Murder in America’s Heartland. His short story “Boundaries” received Special Mention in the 2014 Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses.
Wolf is a frequent participant at scholarly baseball conferences and has published five essays in The Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture. He is the author of The Called Shot: Babe Ruth, the Chicago Cubs, and the Unforgettable Major League Baseball Season of 1932, which was named “best baseball book of 2020” by Sports Collectors Digest.
Bryan and Wolf live in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. They have three grown sons and a dog named Cody.