Again, hats off to the research done to create this series of case studies: I shudder to think about sitting opposite a serial killer asking about their crimes would feel like... I'd love to do it, just like I'd love to skydive, but the likelihood is so minimal that I'm safe to say that! Most of these men are women-haters, the women involved young and as involved in the crimes as their partners, so I don't think I'd be safe behind 20 panels of glass (though I am in my 40s, so it's quite possible a man who likes to murder teens would be perfectly pleasant with me!)
The writing here is crisp and the emphasis is more on the childhoods and the damage done that goes to development of the mind in the younger years. I guess it's written for people with no knowledge of the psychology of crime, something I have plenty of, so I know pretty much how young minds are easily moulded into haters and I also know that it takes a certain sociopathy/psychopathy to create a killer in these conditions - think of all the victims of abuse who don't go on to abuse others...
I enjoyed this book a lot, and recommend it to anyone interested in finding out some of the common denomenators in creating these minds - there's never only one, but a series of events which can create a serial killer, just as there are genetic and enivronmental factors in any condition or behaviour.