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Publisher Claims To Know 1971 Plane Hijacker’s Identity: Today in Books

This edition of Today in Books is sponsored by First Lessons by Lina J. Potter by Litworld Publishing House.

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Publisher Claims To Know 1971 Plane Hijacker’s Identity

There’s only one still unsolved skyjacking in U.S. history: The identity of “D.B. Cooper” the man who hijacked a 1971 flight and parachuted out with $200,000. Carl Laurin’s publishing firm announced they cracked the case with a “memoir detailing the confessions of a longtime friend who supposedly committed the crime: Walter R. Reca, a former military paratrooper and intelligence operative.” (If reading about when plane hijackings were routine is your thing, you’ll probably be interested in The Skies Belong to Us: Love and Terror in the Golden Age of Hijacking by Brendan I. Koerner)

New Albany Library Plants Book-Themed Gardens

In the year that felt like spring would never come, I love this story about a library that turned eyesore spots in the parking lot into gardens inspired by books: “Frankenstein,” “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” “The Color Purple” and “Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.” And in taking it to the next level each garden will have a QR code that can be scanned with a smartphone, which will connect to a library page that gives you information about the flowers and the book.

Jimmy Kimmel Asked People To Name A Book–It Didn’t Go Well

Jimmy Kimmel thought the recent Pew Research Center’s findings that one in four Americans has not read a book was probably even worse in reality so Kimmel Kimmeled and asked random people to name a book. Any book. It went really bad so let’s all hold hands together and laughsob as we watch.