Not bad, even if I didn't learn anything from it that I didn't already know.
This book probably shouldn't have taken me as long to read as it did, being as it's so short. But it really wasn't holding my attention particularly well and I just found myself dipping in and out of it in short spurts. The topic is something that I've previously found quite fascinating - what it is that makes women fall in love with men in prison for murder, rape and other violent offenders - but being as it was written a few decades ago, this is no longer fresh information or a topic that hasn't already been done to death multiple times since. Maybe that means I'm judging the contents unfairly, but it wasn't just the information or the angle that failed to grip me, it was the way in which the writer seemed to want to inject her own dramatic flair to every case study she covered.
I mean, I get it, this is a pop-psy book and the title itself should be enough to let any potential readers know that we're going to be looking at the topic with a little less formality and more than a hint of sensationalism, but it still felt as though Isenberg was trying to straddle the line between tabloid and legitimate study, by having a handful of accredited scholars and professionals in the spheres of psychology and criminal justice, give their opinions on the subject, which she sprinkled throughout the text to give some kind of legitimacy to her need to having written this book.
We get to "meet" various women who either by being asked by their friend to visit their man's cellmate (quite how THAT conversation comes up naturally, I have no idea) or by answering adverts for a pen-pal, found themselves infatuated with the inmate they began to communicate with. There's a bit of basic psychobabble about the "why" that makes some women fall for an incarcerated murderer, but like I said already, nothing that we would now consider new or ground-breaking.
I guess if this is something you know nothing about, you might learn a thing or two from this book, but if you've even watched a couple of episodes of LockUp or one of the various daytime chat-shows that feature this sort of thing, you've pretty much heard it all already.