1st Edition

Dr. Alan R. Moritz and Forensic Pathology Tales That Dead Men Tell

By Rob Moritz Copyright 2025
192 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

192 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

192 Pages 17 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Forensic science has become a mainstay of popular culture on television, in movies, books, and podcasts. Dr. Alan R. Moritz (1899-1986) was a highly influential figure in the development of the field of forensic science as we know it today. Dr. Alan R. Moritz and Forensic Pathology: Tales that Dead Men Tell , written by Dr. Moritz’s journalist grandson Rob Moritz, recounts his life and... Read more

Introduction

 

1. From Nebraska to the World

2. College and Medical School

3. Red Summer, 1919

4. Cleveland

5. Vienna

6. Getting to Harvard

7. Nazi Germany

8. Harvard Years

9. Burn Studies

10. Cocoanut Grove

11. ‘Death on a Silver Platter’

12. Leaving Harvard

13. Going Hollywood

14. Back in Cleveland

15. Family Mystery

16. ‘Classical Mistakes’

17. JFK

18. The Moritz Formula

19. Apartheid

20. Of Myth and Legend

21. Legacy

 

Appendix 1

Appendix 2

Appendix 3

Biography

Rob Moritz is a veteran journalist who reported on crime, government and politics for newspapers in Arkansas, Texas and Tennessee before teaching journalism at the University of Central Arkansas. The third of four sons born to a bauxite miner and a saint, he was born in Kingston, Jamaica, and spent much of his youth in the small South American country of Suriname and in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, before moving to Arkansas in high school. His wife, Gwen, is a journalist who spent much of her career as editor of Arkansas Business. They have two adult sons.