This is a well researched and well written true crime book that I really enjoyed. I am a clinical social worker and worked in child welfare for many years, so there were many interesting mental health and child welfare aspects to this book for me. It's a very sad story in many ways. Obviously the outcome is gruesome and tragic and Larry's back story is also incredibly sad. He had a string of pretty crappy foster parents that I had little sympathy for, especially the people who thought having to change sheets every day because a kid wet the bed was a reason to get rid of him. He did find a permanent home with Bob and Kay Swartz, which should have been a positive ending for him, but unfortunately they did not have the skills, expectations or temperments required to parent older children who'd been through trauma and disrupted attachment. Even today, parents have a hard time getting support for raising kids who have gone through trauma and disrupted attachments and I'm sure it was even worse in the 60's and 70's when mental health and trauma were not things that were typically discussed so I have some sympathy for the fact that it was probably very hard to access appropriate help and information. Having worked in child welfare, I had questioned why Bob and Kay Swartz were able to adopt a second boy, Michael, so soon after taking on the first boy, Larry, who obviously had emotional and attachment problems and needed a lot of support and attention. I feel like this story would have turned out differently if that had not been allowed. At times, I had real difficulty digging up any empathy for the Swartz parents. It seemed like these people were not screened adequately to be adoptive parents. Even though they could meet the children's basic care needs, they seemed to have no parenting skills from an emotional point of view. The husband in particular seemed very ill equipped to be a parent. (How interesting that his special hobby was spending every weekend screaming at women trying to get healthcare during a terrible time in their lives and being sanctimonious about being an adoptive parent.) The way Bob and Kay reacted to the problems in the family and the fact that they completely rejected their oldest adopted son certainly sent a message to the other adopted kids and contributed to the horrible outcome. I hope Annie went on to live with a more loving and understanding family and is somewhere doing well today.