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Across the Quiet Lawn: Greenwich, Privilege, and the Unsolved Murder of Martha Moxley

by Adrian Halden
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Current price ₹1,549.00
Original price ₹1,758.00
Original price ₹1,758.00
Original price ₹1,758.00
(-12%)
₹1,549.00
Current price ₹1,549.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9798197451361
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publisher Imprint: Independently Published
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 262
  • Original Price: GBP 13.52
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 354 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): General

A wealthy neighborhood. A murdered girl. A case that never found lasting closure.

Across the Quiet Lawn is a serious true crime investigation into the unsolved murder of Martha Moxley, the fifteen-year-old Greenwich, Connecticut, teenager killed on Mischief Night in 1975. Set inside the private world of Belle Haven, this nonfiction account follows a case where privilege, memory, delayed prosecution, disputed evidence, and public scrutiny collided for decades.

Martha Moxley's death shocked a community that believed itself insulated from violence. She had been spending the evening with neighborhood teenagers, moving through familiar streets and driveways in one of Greenwich's most protected enclaves. The next day, her body was found on her family's property. The weapon, a broken golf club, pointed investigators toward the household across the street. But what seemed close enough to solve soon became one of the most contested cold case investigations in modern Connecticut history.

This book traces the case from the first missing hours through the investigation, suspect theories, witness contradictions, trial evidence, and the long legal aftermath of Michael Skakel's prosecution. Skakel was convicted in 2002, but that conviction was later vacated, and prosecutors announced in 2020 that they would not retry him. The result is a murder case with a public verdict in its past, no standing conviction in its present, and a central question that remains unresolved.

Adrian Halden approaches the Martha Moxley case with restraint and precision, avoiding sensational shortcuts and false certainty. Across the Quiet Lawn examines not only what happened in Belle Haven, but why the case endured: the power of wealth, the fragility of memory, the limits of old evidence, the pressure of media attention, and the human damage left behind when a family spends decades waiting for an answer.

This is true crime for readers who want depth, discipline, and victim-centered storytelling.

Rather than flattening the case into a simple solved-or-unsolved narrative, the book follows the uncomfortable space between suspicion and proof. It considers why the golf club mattered, why the last-known timeline remained so important, why alternate suspect questions persisted, and why a conviction once accepted by a jury could later fail to become a final legal ending.

Readers can expect a careful reconstruction of a Greenwich murder case shaped by class, geography, youth, institutional pressure, and the long afterlife of public accusation. The book does not promise certainty the record cannot support. It offers something more durable: a clear, structured, and sober account of how one killing became a defining American true crime story.

Some cases end in verdicts. Some end in silence. This one remains suspended between the two.

Return to Belle Haven and follow the case that still refuses a final answer.

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