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Paperback Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters Book

ISBN: 0425196402

ISBN13: 9780425196403

Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

A comprehensive examination into the frightening true crime history of serial homicide--including information on America's most prolific serial killers such as:

Jeffrey Dahmer - Ted Bundy - "Co-ed Killer" Ed Kemper - The BTK Killer - "Highway Stalker" Henry Lee Lucas - Monte Ralph Rissell - "Shoe Fetish Slayer" Jerry Brudos - "Night Stalker" Richard Ramirez - "Unabomber" Ted Kaczynski - Ed Gein "The Butcher of Plainfield"...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

History, present, and future of serial killers

A lot of reviews focused on the history covered by this book, but what I found most compelling was in fact the second half, which discussed the "formation" of a serial killer. In the first half, the author goes back a few centuries to uncover gruesome truths of serial killers across Europe. With every chapter, he steps forward in time, narrating the lives and biographies of famous and not-so-famous killers, from Jack the Ripper to the Boston Strangler. Every page delivers a shock, as the lives and practices of the killers are revealed. If you manage to survive through the photos in the center without passing out at the gore, you'll find the second half even more gripping. It explains how a serial killer develops, how his behavior differs from others in childhood, how he strikes his first victim, and the pattern that dictates his life from there on. There is plenty on the many types of killers and their various approaches to murder. A fair portion near the end of the book is dedicated to criminal profiling and crime scene investigation. The book closes with a chilling chapter on how to survive if you find yourself at the mercy of a serial killer. A very engaging read if you have the heart for the gruesome details!

Required Reading Impossible To Put Down!

This book was on the list of required readings for a criminal justice course I took but it was actually fun to read compared to some of the dull and clinical readings we have to do. I began reading this book on the way home from the campus bookstore, and could hardly put it down until I finished it. This writer deals with some very technical and heavy-going forensic material on serial killers, their psychology, history and investigative techniques. But he explains things in a very understandable way without talking down to you and gives real case examples for his stuff with identifiable details (which forensic texts often do not.) The references in this book are worth its cover price alone. I am so tired of reading "true crime" accounts with no idea where the authors get their information. This writer tells you the source of almost every major fact or controversial claim in his book. You can go and look it up yourself if you don't believe him or want to know more. And there is material here that no other books on Serial Killers deal with. Great book. Smart and hip. A Fast Food Nation or Black Hawk Down of serial killer books. Well researched and brilliantly written. Going beyond books on serial killers, this is one of the better books outright that I have read this year. Just a pleasure to read.

Best book on serial killers and I have read them all.

I am a huge fan of true crime and history and I have read every single book on serial homicide and this is by far the best book on the subject. Period. The author is truly an expert on experts-a historian who ruthlessly separates fact from fiction and truth from myth. This book takes a serious look at some of the weaknesses and failures of so-called profiling experts, something few books do, but also with fairness looks at their successes, giving credit where credit is due. Well-balanced book with no tolerance for bs. This is, without question, the definitive history of serial homicide and its investigation. It literally packs into one volume a very carefully researched analysis of some of the most important issues and questions in serial murder. Very well written, hard to put down look into the minds of serial killers and those who hunt them.

Definitive History of Serial Murder

Right from the beginning the author of this book states that he is not an expert on serial killers-he is just like most readers-a curious amateur. The only difference from the rest of us, he writes, is that he very briefly encountered by accident two serial killers before they were captured. That difference is not that he encountered them, but that he discovered that he had done so, he explains. The rest of us might be lucky to have passed by "our" serial killers and not know it. How many, he asks, do we sit next to on the bus or stand behind in line at supermarket and never find out? The discovery of his own encounters, with Richard ("Times Square Ripper") Cottingham in New York and with Andrei ("Red Ripper-Citizen-X) Chikatilo in Russia, inspired Vronsky to write his book-a history of serial killers. Vronsky's claim to being an amateur is not quite correct. He is a former journalist and according to his website he is currently working on his Ph.D. in history. Not quite the amateur. As a history, Serial Killers: The Method and Madness of Monsters is a formidable work of research paying careful attention to fact and to debunking myths about serial killers. Vronsky traces the historical record on serial homicide back to the Roman Empire and follows it through into medieval times, unearthing the records of serial homicide trials attributing murders to vampires and werewolves, a type of insanity plea of the time, he suggests. He provides a fascinating account of the "London Monster" who a hundred years prior to Jack the Ripper would stalk and stab women on the streets of London, without killing them, and he explores the build-up of sexual crimes against female victims in Europe just before Jack the Ripper comes on the scene. Vronsky is clearly a historian and often fits the phenomenon of serial murder into a historically social context. He describes the proliferation of serial killing in the sixties by pegging the rise of homicides to the Boston Strangler's murder of one of his victims on the day JFK was buried. He writes, "The death of JFK defined for us the halfway point between Pearl Harbor and 9/11-when bad things stopped happening `over there' and began to occur `over here.'" His description of the proliferation of [...] through the Internet and the decline of the porn stores on Times Square and [...] tenuous relationship to fueling homicidal fantasies is fascinating. With an even hand, Vronsky also looks at the relationship of the Bible to fueling those same murderous fantasies. Serial Killers explores the issue of how many serial killers really are out there and debunks the often cited number of 50,000 missing children that John Walsh, the host of America's Most Wanted, claimed were kidnapped and murdered every year by serial killers. Vronsky takes a hard look at the history of the FBI behavioral sciences profiling and reveals some of its failures and looks at the most recent studies of the weaknesses of profiling. Seria
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