אביסעלע היסטאריע איבער לי הארווי אסוואלד און לואידזשי מאנדזשאוני פון די קענעדי שיסעריי

Novelist and critic Walter Kirn joined The Tucker Carlson Show to provide an exclusive update on the bizarre and unsettling case of Luigi Mangione, a murder investigation that has increasingly drawn comparisons to the story of Lee Harvey Oswald.
Kirn, best known for his novel Up in the Air and the true crime memoir Blood Will Out, brought his literary insight to bear on a case that seems too strange to be real — yet too real to ignore. According to Kirn, “only a great novelist can truly understand a story this weird.”
Mangione’s case has captivated a small but growing national audience for its twists, unanswered questions, and eerie echoes of past conspiracies. The details surrounding his background, associations, and possible government connections have sparked online debate and deep investigative interest — including from Kirn himself, who has tracked the case closely for months.
Kirn, who serves as Editor-at-Large at County Highway magazine and co-hosts the America This Week podcast with Matt Taibbi, hinted that more revelations could be forthcoming. He expressed concern not only about the nature of the crime itself, but also about the patterns it might be repeating from darker chapters of American history.
“It feels like a story we’ve heard before… and not just in fiction,” Kirn told Carlson. “It’s got elements that echo Dallas, 1963. There are patterns — and the longer this goes on, the stranger those patterns get.”
Kirn’s next book, Homesick, an American travelogue, is set to be published by Liveright Publishing next year — and some suspect it may include reflections from the Mangione investigation, especially if the case continues to evolve in such mysterious fashion.
As public interest in Luigi Mangione’s case grows, Kirn’s analysis reminds viewers that sometimes, the truth isn’t just stranger than fiction — it might be fiction’s dark twin.
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