According to the back of the book: "Award-winning investigative reporter Robert Kolker delivers a haunting and humanizing account of the true-life search for a serial killer still at large on Long Island, in a compelling tale of unsolved murder and internet prostitution."
Five girls. Maureen, Megan, Amber, Melissa and Shannon. All five had promise, loved ones, passions, pursuits, hopes and dreams. All five had turned to prostitution for their own reasons, specifically using the adult section on craigslist to advertise their "wares." And all five had their lives cut short as a result. Their killer has never been found.
Robert Kolker does a decent job humanizing the victims. He takes us on a journey with each of the five girls, shining some light on their respective pasts. You can tell he was very emotionally invested in each girl's story, and it shows as he tells us about them. He really gives the reader a good idea of who each girl was, and what they were like before they were killed. What IS missing from this portion of the story is photos. With each new chapter in the first section of the book, Kolker introduces another of the victims, and I found myself stopping to search the internet for images of each of the girls as I read, so I could put a face with a name.
The numbers are staggering. "According to a study conducted on one hundred and thirty people working as prostitutes in San Francisco, as adults in prostitution, 82% had been physically assaulted, 83% had been threatened with a weapon and 68% had been raped while working as prostitutes" (information via wikipedia.org). And that is just a small sampling of the risks of prostitution, without even factoring in the possibility of being a murder target. Even without looking up statistics like I just did, these girls had to know that they were putting themselves in danger by doing what they did. I wish more attention had been paid to just how these girls ended up turning to prostitution. But perhaps that is part of the mystery as well. How could such seemingly vibrant, promising young girls turn to such a degrading and dangerous profession? That seemed to be a question the surviving friends and family members were asking as well. I did have some trouble reconciling the juxtaposition of the two concepts presented in the book: the girls are all described as such promising young ladies, despite the hardships they each faced. Yet none of them seemed able to resist the temptation of the drugs, the sex, the money. And it would seem that for each of them, it was their undoing.
The first half of the book reads better than the second half. The book begins by detailing each girl's life and personality, then revisits each girl, glimpsing their lives and personas developed as they descend into prostitution. Then it goes back one more time to detail the last time each girl was seen, one at a time. Kolker does a good job here, first getting us personally invested, then detailing the darker aspects of the girl's lives (the prostitution and drugs), then building suspense as the inevitable draws near.
The second half is where the book loses momentum. This is the first book Robert Kolker has written, and this is where is starts to show. A little steam gets lost as he turns largely to speculation and focuses a little too much on the gossip and assumptions of both the victims' family members, as well as the members of the community where their bodies were discovered. The Oak Beach community and its own personal story and neighborhood dramas take a little too much focus at times. What doesn't change is Kolker's obvious investment in this unsolved case. You can tell he really was personally invested in the story he's written.
Lost Girls tells the sad and chilling tale of 5 girls who fell victim not only to prostitution, but to an as yet unknown killer in Long Island. Until reading this book, I had not heard of any of these poor girls who had gone missing and whose bodies were subsequently found in Oak Beach. It seems that the relative lack of sensationalism given to this case was as much a part of the tragedy as any other detail. As I read, I was stunned to learn how long it took for the case to gain any attention both from law enforcement and the media. The sad fact is that a missing prostitute just doesn't get the same attention as a missing child, or a missing wife and mother. Whether it's right or wrong, it seems to be the unfortunate trend. These women went missing and were murdered just within the last few years, yet until now their stories have been largely untold. Despite the fact that their families and loved ones have to live with the face that the killer is still out there, at least they can take a small comfort that with this book, these girls are gone but not forgotten.