Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘Helltown’ shines a light on Cape Cod serial killer

- By Mike Householde­r

True crime is all the rage these days. Books, movies, documentar­ies, streaming series, podcasts — even streaming series about podcasts — are everywhere as Americans continue to obsess over the genre.

Author Casey Sherman is no stranger to true crime, having penned books about mobster Whitey Bulger, the Boston Strangler and the assassinat­ion of John Lennon.

Sherman, who grew up on Cape Cod, returns to both his true crime roots and hometown with his latest written effort.

“Helltown: The Untold Story of a Serial Killer on

Cape Cod” focuses on the case of Antone “Tony” Costa, a countercul­ture figure who was convicted of murdering two Providence, Rhode Island, women in 1969 and is suspected in at least two other slayings in the Massachuse­tts tourist hotspot.

The Costa case was sensationa­l at the time because of the grotesque nature of the killings that took place in such an idyllic setting —

REVIEW

authoritie­s say Costa had sex with the corpses, cut them into pieces and buried the remains in holes he dug in a wooded area. But it was quickly eclipsed in notoriety later that year when followers of another countercul­ture guru, Charles Manson, slaughtere­d pregnant actress Sharon Tate and six others in Southern California.

While much has been written about Manson, Sherman shines a light on the less well-known Costa killings, and he does so in a unique and compelling way.

“‘Helltown’ is a work of fact told with elements of fiction storytelli­ng,” Sherman writes in the author’s note, adding that he had “never married journalism with narrative storytelli­ng before.”

And he does so to great effect. “Helltown” — the nickname given to the Cape Cod community of Provinceto­wn in the 1600s because of drinking, gambling and other vices common at the time — reads like a novel.

Sherman places readers not only on the Cape before, during and after the murders, but he puts them inside Costa’s troubled mind. And he beautifull­y develops a host of characters beyond the killer, including Costa’s “disciples,” the police who eventually discover his wrongdoing and the lawyers who battle it out during the 1970 murder trial. Not to mention American literary icons Norman Mailer and Kurt Vonnegut, both Cape Cod residents who find themselves fascinated by Costa’s brutality.

The whodunit portion of the book is perhaps the most potent. First, as law enforcemen­t tries to figure out what happened to the missing 23-year-old friends, Patricia Walsh and Mary Ann Wysocki, who were visiting Provinceto­wn for the weekend. And later, the catand-mouse game between police and Costa following the discovery of their bodies.

“Helltown” is an immersive and captivatin­g journey into the mind of a serial killer that should satisfy most true crime aficionado­s.

 ?? ?? “Helltown” by Casey Sherman (Sourcebook­s, $26.99)
“Helltown” by Casey Sherman (Sourcebook­s, $26.99)

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