Continuing in the same well-written and accessible style as the previous editions, this text systematically examines the strange phenomenon of serial murder. Exploring the different types of serial killers, the authors present a clear image of the typology, behavioral patterns, and motivation of the various types of serial killers.
New to This Edition Serial Murder, Third Edition is ideal for use as a supplementary text in Homicide, Violence, and Deviance courses offered in departments of criminology, psychology, and sociology
Writing is sloppy and presumptuous. Authors make statements without supporting evidence or citations. I recognize this was published years ago, but that doesn’t excuse the corner-cutting. This is a text book- that should mean a higher standard, not lower. I did enjoy it for the historical context, if nothing else.
It was okay. I felt that for a book that poked at true crime authors, perhaps the writing could have been more inspired. Overall left me feeling "meh" at the end.
Fun fact though, according to this book, the FBI says there are 35 active serial killers living among us each day. A little scary.
First read this as a text book at university but come back to it every now and then as the content is fascinating and it's well written and well researched
interesting topic and boring book, goes into great detail about some mundane things and leaves out other things (like an entire interview with ted bundy) overall interesting read