Escape at 10,000 feet D.B. Cooper and the missing money

Tom Sullivan

Book - 2021

"A minute-by-minute account of the only unsolved airplane hijacking in the United States uses reproductions of FBI files and investigation photographs to chronicle the events surrounding an unidentified extortionist's 1971 hijacking and disappearance."--Provided by publisher.

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jGRAPHIC NOVEL/Sullivan
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Subjects
Genres
Case studies
Nonfiction comics
Graphic novels
True crime stories
Biographical comics
Published
New York, NY : Balzer + Bray, Harper Alley, imprints of HarperCollinsPublishers [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Tom Sullivan (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
94 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780062991522
9780062991515
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4--6--Kicking off the "Unsolved Case Files" series, this terse, clipped account of the only still-unsolved skyjacking in U.S. history offers a minute-by-minute recap of the crime, then a tally of the forensic evidence, a general overview of the ensuing (fruitless) investigation, and an assessment of theories about what might have happened. In late 1971, a time when, Sullivan writes, "virtually anybody could walk into any airport in the country and bring anything they wanted onto a plane," a hijacker styling himself "Dan Cooper" (a false name later garbled by press reports) jumped from the rear stairs of a Boeing 727 in midair over Washington State with $200,000 in marked bills…and was never seen again. Nor was the money--aside from three bundles of shabby bills discovered near a stream in 1980 by an eight-year-old vacationer. The blocky art, which ranges from full spreads to pages of two or three unbordered but discrete panels, reflects the matter-of-fact tone with flat, simply drawn diagrams, aerial maps, news items, faux dossier pages, reconstructed events, and portraits of the crew and the mysterious perp, all rounded off with a set of period photos. Short lists of print and web resources offer young would-be sleuths further details to ponder. VERDICT Elementary and middle school fans of the true crime genre will enjoy this puzzler.--John Peters, Children's Literature Consultant, New York

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A middle-grade graphic novel chronicling the only unsolved commercial hijacking in aviation history. On Nov. 24, 1971, a suit-clad White man strolled into Portland (Oregon) International Airport, black briefcase in hand. He purchased a one-way ticket aboard Northwest Orient Airlines' Flight 305 to Seattle under the name "Dan Cooper," seated himself behind three dozen Boeing 727 passengers, and slipped a note to a flight attendant just before takeoff. Unless he received $200,000 in cash, two front parachutes, and two back parachutes upon landing, Cooper promised to detonate the makeshift bomb in his briefcase. In Seattle, Cooper released his unwitting hostages alongside a new set of demands: Now, the plane would travel to Mexico City at the lowest possible speed, flying no higher than 10,000 feet with the landing gear deployed and a rear staircase lowered. Cooper never made it to Mexico: Instead, he leapt into the cold, rainy night above the forests of Washington. Though the hijacker vanished without a trace, his alias--misreported as "D.B. Cooper"--lives on. This stranger-than-fiction saga thrives thanks to spectacular design choices: "Dick Tracy"--esque, hard-boiled cartooning; rugged, mechanical typefaces; and a bevy of files, folders, and miscellaneous paperwork come together to form a fabulous criminal collage. Sidebars impart such important particulars as the precise weight of a dollar bill and Cooper's conceptual-but--decidedly-amateur familiarity with parachutes. A compulsively readable series debut. (photos, afterword, sources) (Graphic nonfiction. 8-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.