Too Late to Say Goodbye

Abridged
Author: Ann Rule
Narrator: Karen Ziemba
Genres: Non-Fiction, True-Crime, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Date: June 2007
Length: 6 hours
Ratings:
  • Book Rating: 0/5
Formats:
  • WMA

Overview

"Bart Corbin, the ""handsome twin,"" sailed through dental school, a popular, brilliant student, who always had a pretty girl on his arm. Fourteen years ago, about to graduate in Augusta,Georgia, he was engaged to Dolly Hearn, also a dental student, whose academic achievements outshone even his own, something he couldn't accept. Frightened by his rage, Dolly broke their engagement , only to be stalked and harassed. Her father gave her a gun for protection, but Dolly died in an apparent suicide--a bullet in her brain.

Dr. Bart's career soared, and he married Jenn Barber. Outwardly, they had it all, two little boys, a home in a posh section of an Atlanta suburb. Still, six years later the secrets they hid from each other surfaced. Bart was unfaithful, and Jenn found what she believed to be love on the Internet. But nothing was as it appeared. Jenn Corbin thought that she was writing to a kind sensitive man on the Internet, but she learned near the end of her life that ""Chris Hearn"" was not a male; Chris was really Anita Hearn, a lesbian woman. Jenn felt utterly betrayed and was horrified--but later continued to write to the person who was not a lover but now had become a friend. Chris-Anita Hearn was not related to Dolly Hearn in any way at all--but Bart thought she was and that Jenn had uncovered the truth in Dolly's death and was about to reveal his guilt.

Jenn moved toward divorce, but in early December, 2004, detectives ruled Jenn's death by a gunshot to the head a suicide. Two beautiful women, bound to Bart Corbin, both dead of a method of suicide extremely rare in females. Detectives on either side of Georgia looked more closely, uncovering shocking physical and circumstantial evidence, and another unexplained death of a female employee of Bart Corbin. Initial pre-trial hearings included the reading of steamy, sexually-charged emails, raising even more questions. Ann Rule has the cooperation of the victims' family members and witnesses yet unnamed. Two trials in 2006 lie ahead, but, for now, Bart Corbin is jailed without bail. He denies any guilt. Seldom in the annals of criminal history has there been a double-murder case with so many secrets, lies, and bizarre side-stories, all pointing to one almost unbelievable conclusion
rIn 1990, Dr. Bart Corbin had shot Dolly Hearn in the head, arranged her body and the gun so that it appeared to be a suicide, and gone on with his life. As an extremely popular dentist in upscale Dacula, Georgia, he carried on an intense affair with a female employee for years before he married Jenn--a marriage hurried by her pregnancy--but he never stopped seeing his mistress. When Jenn told him she was leaving, he crept into his own home in the wee hours of the morning and shot her in the head in a macabre re-play of Dolly's murder, knowing full well that his little boys would be the ones to discover her body. He had his alibi--his twin brother who would swear Bart was with him all evening. But Bart made mistakes; Jenn's spinal cord was severed, and there was no way she could have slipped the gun beneath the covers as she lay mortally wounded, and his cell phone proved to be bouncing off a tower close to his home--and not near the cocktail lounge where he claimed to be. And there is no explanation at all, except for mere chance, that the person Jenn fell in love with in the Internet game was also named ""Hearn,"" Dolly's name. Corbin had panicked for nothing, believing that he was finally about to be investigated for a 14-year-old murder.

Murder "willed out" after all.

Author Details

Author Details

Rule, Ann

"Ann Rule is regarded by many as the foremost true crime writer in America, and the author responsible for the genre as it exists today. She came to her career with a solid background in law enforcement and the criminal justice system. Both her grandfather and her uncle were Michigan sheriffs, her cousin was a Prosecuting Attorney and another uncle was the Medical Examiner. Raised in that environment, she grew up wanting to work in law enforcement herself. She is a former Seattle Policewoman, former caseworker for the Washington State Department of Public Assistance, former student intern at the Oregon State Training School for Girls.

Ann Rule was born in Lowell, Michigan on October 22. Her father, Chester R. Stackhouse, was a football, basketball and track coach. Her mother, Sophie Hansen Stackhouse, was a schoolteacher who taught the developmentally disabled. The family moved often as ""Stack"" Stackhouse's coaching career bloomed. They lived in Saginaw and Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Coatesville, Pennsylvania, Salem, Oregon, Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania, and Palo Alto, California. With her ex-husband, Bill Rule, Ann lived in El Paso, Texas, and Youngstown, N.Y. She now lives near Seattle, Washington, on the shores of Puget Sound. She is the mother of five, grandmother of three. Her daughter, Leslie Rule is also a writer. Leslie's books are Whispers From the Grave and Kill Me Again. Leslie has a new book out called Coast to Coast Ghosts--True Stories of Hauntings Across America

Laura works with children of battered women and the elderly, Andy Rule works in consumer research, Mike Rule manages Ann's office and does interviews for the Blind Radio Network, and Bruce Sherles works in the cookie industry.

Ann has been a full-time true crime writer since 1969. Over the past 30 years, she has published 20 books and 1400 articles, mostly on criminal cases. Ann graduated from Coatesville High School, and has a BA from the University of Washington in Creative Writing, with minors in psychology, criminology and penology. She studied two years at Highline Community College, taking courses in crime scene investigation, police administration, crime scene photography and arrest, search and seizure. She has attended every seminar that police organizations invite her to, including those on organized crime, arson, bomb search, DNA, etc. She has 30 hours credit at the University of Washington Medical School earned by attending the National Medical Examiners' Conference. She attended the King County Police Basic Homicide School for two weeks. Today, she herself teaches seminars to many law enforcement groups. She is a certified instructor in many states on subjects such as: Serial Murder, Sadistic Sociopaths, Women Who Kill, and High Profile Offenders. She was on the U.S. Justice Department Task Force that set up VI-CAP, the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program now in place at FBI Headquarters in Quantico, a computer tracking system to help identify and trap serial killers. She has testified twice before Senate Judiciary Sub-committees on victims' rights and on the danger of serial killers.

When Ann spent her summer vacations with her grandparents in Stanton, Michigan, she helped her grandmother prepare meals for the prisoners in the jail. She used to wonder why such friendly, normal-appearing, men were locked behind bars, and why the sweet woman in the cell upstairs--who taught Ann to crochet--was about to go on trial for murder. That was the beginning of her lifelong curiosity about the ""Whys"" behind criminal behavior. Her books all explore the reasons behind the front-page cases she covers.

Ann's books deal with three areas: the victims' stories; the detectives and prosecutors and how they solve their cases with old fashioned police work and modern forensic science, and the killers? lives. She tries to go back to the killers' early childhood, and even back into their family histories to find some of the genesis of their behavior. She spends many months researching her books, beginning with the trial and with many subsequent visits to the locale where the crimes occurred. Once she has finished her research, she returns to her office to write her books.

Currently, she is under contract to Simon & Schuster/Free Press and Pocket Books. Her hardcover books are with Free Press and her original ""Ann Rule's Crime Files"" series is published by Pocket Books. She is now writing her 9th and 10th ""Crime Files"" books.

20 of Ann's books have been New York Times' bestsellers, with Every Breath You Take and Last Dance, Last Chance both on the list at the same time. Four books have been made into TV movies, and five more are in the works. She won the coveted Peabody Award for her miniseries, Small Sacrifices, and has two Anthony Awards from Bouchercon, the mystery fans' organization. She has been nominated three times for Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America. She was also awarded the Washington State Governor's Award.

Ann is active in support groups for victims of violent crimes and their families, in the Y.W.C.A.'s program to help battered and abused women, and in Childhelp and Childhaven, support groups for children.

Ann's hobbies often take a backseat to her writing, but she has many interests. She loves animals and has two dogs and five cats at last count. She loves to garden, and collects ""way too many things,"" including: antique bottles and pill boxes, miniature cars, cobalt blue glass, police paraphernalia, wind chimes, and teddy bears. She is still working on her dollhouse, a rather unusual one--a house of ill repute. She tries to walk two or three miles every morning before she starts writing, and loves to beach comb and go to second-hand stores. Of course, she loves to read--mostly non- fiction--biographies, autobiographies, and books on medical science. Her favorite authors are Anne Tyler, Garrison Keillor, Jerry Bledsoe, James Neff, Kathy Casey, Lois Duncan, Edna Buchanan, John Updike, Erma Bombeck, Donna Anders, Carl Hiassen, and, of course, Leslie Rule!

Ann sends out a free newsletter about once a year by mail. For those who don't have access to the on-line newsletter or who want it in hard copy, please send your street or P.O. Box address to the her box number, and she will be glad to put you on the mailing list. The on-line newsletter will be updated frequently. "