Anastasia J Casey, the person who apparently published a book on Charlie Kirk’s assassination, has no known writing history, and now it’s not even certain whether it’s a real person. “The Shooting of Charlie Kirk: A Comprehensive Account of the Utah Calley University Attack, the Aftermath, and America’s Response,” the $6 book was listed on Amazon under the published date of September 9. Amazon later removed it and clarified that it was published on September 10, after Kirk was assassinated. “The shooting at Utah Valley University was a shocking and heartbreaking event. Yet through the chaos, fear, an uncertainty, the responses of students, faculty, law enforcement, and the broader community illuminate the potential for courage, solidarity and thoughtful reflection,” a viral screenshot apparently from the Kindle book said. “Charlie Kirk’s survival, the mobilization of first responders, the unity of the Utah community, and the national conversations that followed all highlight that even in the darkest moments, society can choose resilience over despair, dialogue over division and hope over fear.”“Ultimately, this book is a testament to those choices — a guide not just to understanding a single tragic event, but to learning from it, confronting teh challenges it reveals, and striving towards a safer, more thoughtful, and more united America.”
Who is Casey D Parisi, another writer of another Kirk assassination book?
After online frenzy over Anastasia J Casey’s book, another book on Kirk’s assassination surfaced. It was apparently written by Casey D Parisi titled “The Charlie Kirk Shooting: A Nation on Edge”, published on September 10. With many of these books mushrooming on Amazon in the late hours of Wednesday, experts are of the opinion that these books are AI-written and the writers are not real people, but fictitious names. These books were not written before Kirk’s death and they were later updated to reflect that Kirk died from the bullet wound. Many social media users believe that they were intentionally made to show an earlier date as the publish date to create the frenzy.