Nonfiction isn't usually my thing, but a family friend, who is a psychologist, thought I would be interested in Children Who Kill by Carol Anne Davis due to my interest in the field (of psychology, not children killing). The book was thin enough (around 250 pages), so I decided to sit down with it. I consider myself a slower reader, but I was finished with this one in less than a week. It was simply so engaging and thrilling, I couldn't put it down.
First, this book is divided into two parts. The first part deals with different young murderers, each given their own chapters, and assesses what they did and the contributing factors as to why they did it. The second section of this book focuses more on mythbusting, such as pointing out and then deconstructing, which things society often blames for making children killers, but are ultimately less responsible for their creation (such as rock music).
In the first portion, I appreciate how Davis did not limit herself. The killers she profiled were both British and American, male and female, with varying ages (some being quite young children and others being in their mid-teens) and modi operandi, such as arson, poisoning, and shooting, some with and some without a sexual element. So the scope of killer she included is broad, which is helpful from a psychological standpoint--it helps to prove that not all killers behave alike, think alike, or are motivated for the same purposes. Some have criticized Davis as making excuses for the killers in this book, but I disagree. I found her tone honest and neutral, without downplaying either what they did or the wrongs done onto them that helped spur them on to become killers (bad parents are no less responsible for their cruelty than than the violent product of their parenting is for being a killer).
In the second section of this book, Davis even makes a point of explaining how the cycle of violence tends to culminate in murder. She provides examples of how the subjects' parents were mistreated when they were children., and then went on to repeat the bad things they learned. This effectively shows that child murderers do not spring from nowhere--it's not a case of simple bad luck--but that the home environment and parenting style have a much stronger effect on a child than, say, too much television.
From the perspective of a layperson not well-trained in psychology, I highly enjoyed this read. The entertainment value is there. It was not written in a sensationalist way, and was not sympathetic, either. It was an honest reporting of facts, neither demonizing nor dismissing the perpetrators for what they've done. I was not familiar with any of the killers mentioned beforehand, but I think that unawareness mixed with her neutral writing worked in my favor, since I did not already have, say, a blinding hatred for anyone written about, and could focus solely on her reporting. I found this book entertaining and informative, and would be interested in her other works (especially her new work on sadistic killers). Please keep in mind that Davis has no formal psychological or forensic training--she is ultimately not that much more informed than anyone else in the public is about these kinds of topics. But she arranges the information in a way that is palatable and easy to read, so anyone interested in brushing up on notable figures of this sort has a bevy of basic information to keep them entertained--and that is, ultimately, what books are for.
I think I loved this book so much because of my preexisting interest in the topic. Those who don't share that interest probably won't be converts from this book. Nonfiction has a way of seeming dry and boring, and I don't have much faith that this book could kindle that in someone who is neutral at best in the subject.