This was really a great read. I only give it 4 stars due to the grammatical errors. On one hand, you’ve got the poor grammar as spoken by Pee Wee Gaskins himself, which is no issue to me. I’m happy to read his words spoken, such as “knowed” and “favoritest”. These are the words of a poorly educated individual and it gives the reader more insight into Gaskins’ persona; it provides the experience of knowing the serial killer in a deeper way, while reading about his life.
The errors that were not so great, were those that the publisher never fixed before printing. As follows, here are some examples of what I found:
“…they took off the cuffs and manacles and locked me inside the room to wait f23or my lawyer…” (p.71)
“…I told them that if they ever crossed me again, I would string them up and cut off their halls.” (p.85)
On p.119, there are about 8 spaces between two words in a sentence
“So I decided to move away from Sumter. wwwCharleston was my choice.” (p.121)
“…truth was, my wife went off 164omewhere else…” (p.164)
These unfortunate errors just diluted my reading experience. I had to shake my head, as it seems as though a robot edited this work. This is the first edition by Monster Publishing. I do hope that they do not intend to publish anymore if these sort of works are their norm. If they do, I hope they do a better job at editing. The original autobiography of Gaskins was published in the 1990’s, and copies of the book nowadays are selling for over $300 each. It’s great that Monster Publishing is making more affordable reprints, but you have to wonder if these print errors were actually in the originals or not?
Going past the printing errors, this book kept me entirely engaged. Books on serial killers have always interested me. Some public opinions about such books are: Why read something so morbid? Why are you interested in this kind of stuff? For me, the answer is that the human psyche is so complex and intriguing. I like to read into what exactly causes a human being to do such horrible things to another human being? In this case, as in the cases of many other renown killers, it started due to childhood abuse.
Also, why forget? Why bury horrible truths because they are so cringeworthy? Just because we don’t like the things we read or hear, doesn’t make them any less real. Should we bury the past just because it’s horrible? I don’t think so — it’s the same reason we’ve never forgotten The Holocaust.
All that said, this read is engaging and interesting. It caused many different emotions in me: pity for both the victims and the killer, sadness, anger, arousal, laughter…. You name it — read this book and you’ll feel it.