Tag Archives: scout camp

2025 Book Tour!

I’m traveling around the Midwest and signing copies of my new true crime book, Scout Camp soon. Come see me!

Also, you can order or pick up signed copies from Loganberry Books in Shaker Heights, Ohio whenever you’d like!

Friday, February 28: Official Book Launch at Barnes & Noble, Fairlawn, Ohio. 7 p.m.

March 1 & 2: The Loveland Frogman Festival.

Tuesday, March 4: Signing at the Jordan Creek Barnes & Noble in Des Moines, Iowa. 6 – 8 p.m.

Thursday, March 6: Reading & Signing at Left Bank Books in St. Louis, Missouri. 6 p.m.

Friday, March 7: Signing at Magic City Books, Tulsa, Oklahoma. 6 – 8 p.m.

Saturday, March 8: Signing at New Market Square Barnes & Noble in Wichita, Kansas . 2- 4 p.m.

Read the first 20 pages of Scout Camp in Publishers Marketplace’s Buzz Books!

Publishers Marketplace just released their Buzz Books picks for Winter/Spring 2025. These are the books they’re excited to read this year and it’s an honor to have Scout Camp featured in the new edition. They excerpt the first 20 pages and you can download their book here.

You have to wait until Feb 25 to read the rest! But you can preorder today!

Scout Camp now available for pre-order!

My next true crime book comes out February 25, 2025 but you can preorder today! This one is quite personal and serves as a kind of autobiography, too.

Preorder it on Amazon here.

Here’s the writeup.

In this timely and deeply personal true crime memoir, acclaimed journalist, author, creator of the True Crime This Week podcast, and former Boy Scout James Renner, explores the dark side of an American institution, its pervasive culture of sexual abuse, and the traumatic—even deadly—repercussions of its long-buried secrets.

In the summer of 1995, at the largest Boy Scout camp in Ohio, a night of sexual violence ended with one counselor dead and another hospitalized. The death was ruled “accidental.” It wouldn’t be the last death associated with Seven Ranges Reservation.
 
James Renner, too, was a counselor at Seven Ranges that year. He was always sure there must be more to the story of Mike Klingler’s death, because Renner also knew firsthand that the 900-acre camp was not the safe getaway it was portrayed to be. On Friday nights the boys were ushered into the woods for a frightening ceremony in which they learned the rules for becoming good young men—and, above all, that keeping secrets was a Scout’s duty. No matter how dark the secrets were.
 
Determined to face his demons, Renner embarks on a journey back to that tumultuous summer and exposes a clandestine society that left indelible scars on the Scouts and the staff who were there. For Renner, it meant opening up about his twisted upbringing, his issues with trust and sexuality, and a lifetime of self-medication. The result is a deeply personal, no-holds-barred, and vitally important true crime memoir.