Anything counter or subcultural has been a focus of my personal studies for years. Organized crime, musical movements, serial murderers, etc. With that said, I am always devouring as much source material as I can. This book was a very sweet gift from a friend, but unfortunately, their good intentions could not save this book from its authors.
For starters, the authors and editor should reconsider their calling in life. The entire book is riddled with spelling and grammatical errors. In some cases they omit words or just make them up. As an academic, I have seen some truly horrible writing, but this is right up there among some of my most abysmal students. Don't even get me started on their version of "citation."
Secondly, given the length of my study on virtually every one of the individuals mentioned in this book, I can assure you that there is very little truth to many of the stories shared. It appears as though the authors simply binged all the true crime television they could find and simply regurgitated it back onto a page. Far too many inaccuracies to count and there is always this eerie sense that they are attempting to make the reader empathise with the subjects.
Third, as the book progresses you can see the effort and quality (what minimal amount there is) waning. Chapters get shorter and shorter, details become fewer and fewer, and the inaccuracies multiply ten fold. Also, the odd guessing games that are thrown in as if to just take up space with no introduction are clunky and, again, oversimplified and inaccurate.
Overall, this book would be better suited to the gossip rack in a grocery checkout line than a bookshelf. What is perhaps the most puzzling, is the fact that they have been published over and over again. This type of misinformation, while not crucial to our society's health, is certainly disappointing.