I've been interested in these confessions - the only ones he made aside from the third party psychological review in previous interviews. Some say Bundy murdered over a hundred, which he scoffs at here, but the 30 he's admitted to are certainly not the full amount! Or at least, from my own knowledge of the egos of serial killers, I'd assume there'd be some he'd be holding close even in the face of death.
It still makes many shiver, the brutality and the twisted nature of this man, and there have been many more like him in the intervening years, and more imprisoned killers dying every year - Peter Sutcliffe became a footnote in the news not a week back, not even the headline was given to the prostitute killer of 1970s Yorkshire and Lancashire women when he died - a pandemic will do that! One good thing a killer of 500+ a day will do is overshadow it's human counterparts!
Bundy's secrets, and his insight into the crimes of Gary Ridgeway, the Green River Killer, which were more accurate than the FBI's, are fascinating, as they do cement the idea that it takes a killer to catch a killer. Worth a read just to hear the words of a man 30 years dead about his crimes in his last bid to save a few months of his life!
A part of the obsession in reading these serial killer books could be the fear of this pandemic, where the indiscriminate deaths merely in the UK are reaching over 500 atm, not to mention the rest of the world. I always said, through my life, that nature would cap the population of earth in this sort of way. I feel vindicated, but not in a good way. I wish I'd been wrong!