Acclaim for we is got him
“Verdict: A must-read for those interested in true crime and law enforcement history”
-Library Journal
“That the two events actually overlap is a writer's gift to Hagen, but more the result of her triple-threat skills as researcher, journalist and storyteller.”
-Minneapolis, St. Paul Star Tribune
“A slice of American crime history both instructive and tragically entertaining."
-Kirkus Reviews
“Hagen's We Is Got Him chronicles an equally horrific, more heartbreaking, and tragically more relevant 19th century story with characters only Dostoevsky could invent."
-Michael Capuzzo, New York Times Best-Selling Author of The Murder Room
“As sad and unsettling as this tale is, Hagen tells it with the splendidly compelling narrative momentum of a contemporary true crime writer..."
-The Philadelphia Inquirer
Featured on Mysteries at the Museum
The Ransom Notes
Update (since publication):
In 2013, 22 of the 23 kidnapping letters resurfaced in the basement of a northwest Philadelphia family home. The letters, which had disappeared from the papers of Charley's father Christian sometime after his 1897 death, seemed to have come from a 20th century auction lot. Once authenticated by Freeman's Auctioneers and Appraisers, the letters went to auction in December 2013. A local collector purchased the documents and donated them to the Germantown Historical Society.
In Spring 2014, Carrie Hagen co-curated an exhibition featuring the letters at Germantown Historical Society. Eve Kahn for The New York Times included "Kidnapped: The Ransom Letters of Charley Ross, Lost and Found," in her list of the year's most intriguing auction finds.
The letters are part of the collection at the Germantown Historical Society and available for public viewing.