cover image After Etan: The Missing Child Case That Held America Captive

After Etan: The Missing Child Case That Held America Captive

Lisa R. Cohen, . . Grand Central, $25.99 (379pp) ISBN 978-0-446-58251-3

Emmy-winning TV newsmagazine producer Cohen examines one of the most publicized missing child cases in America. On May 25, 1979, Etan Patz left his family's SoHo loft to walk two blocks to catch his school bus, the first time his parents let him make the trip alone. He was never seen again. Early in the investigation, police interviewed Jose Antonio Ramos, whose “interest in little blond boys” had become known to police, yet they dismissed Ramos as a suspect in the Patz case. But over the years, Ramos repeatedly intimated that he molested and murdered Patz and hid the body. Assistant U.S. Attorney Stuart GraBois doggedly and shrewdly pursued Ramos, hoping prison informants could coax a confession. Cohen details GraBois's efforts and the pain Stan and Julie Patz endured as years passed and Etan's fate remained a mystery. Perhaps most heart-wrenching is Stan's twice-yearly ritual of mailing Etan's “missing” poster to Ramos in prison, always with the same message: “What did you do to my little boy?” As true crime, this tragic tale is a standout, and Cohen, though no prose stylist, does a creditable job telling it. (May)