This book starts out with an introduction to Paul Harrison’s personal background, through his childhood and into his police career, during which he claims to have interviewed the infamous big name serial killers we all know, such as Ted Bundy and John Wayne Gacy. Sadly, many of these stories are nothing more than stories. In 2019, Paul Harrison was discredited by his peers, and it turns out that many of these stories aren’t completely factual, or perhaps did not occur at all.
That is not the only misleading thing about this book. After his introduction to who he is, Harrison claims that this book will not be a book about the grisly details of these killers’ crimes but will be more about the history of the killers themselves, detailing their childhoods or backgrounds, and what possibly drove them to kill. The book does the exact opposite of that promise, going into graphic details and descriptions about crimes scenes of brutal murders. Included are the scenes of the Manson Family murders at the home of Sharon Tate and the state in which Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment was found, along with descriptions of the Polaroid images Dahmer kept of his dismembered victims. This doesn’t bother me in general, in fact I typically like learning about these types of details, it just seemed strange to make that statement only to do the exact opposite.
All that misrepresentation aside, I did appreciate the telling of the information relating to the murders, as I found it to be factually accurate based on what I know from recordings I have read from other sources. Harrison does get that part right; however, I did not learn any new information which I did not already know about these crimes and killers, which was somewhat a disappointment.
I listened to this on Audible and thought the narration was excellent.