At 8 a.m. on Wednesday, October 1, 1997, nerdy, overweight outcast Luke Woodham, 16, entered his Pearl, Mississippi high school to settle some scores. Armed with a .30-30 hunting rifle, he opened fire and then calmly walked out of the school door, leaving two teenage girls dead and another seven students seriously wounded. Police soon discovered that Woodham's 11-minute rampage had actually begun hours before at home, where they found his mother, Mary Anne, brutally beaten with a baseball bat and then stabbed to death.
Evil Cult
Luke Woodham may have been the assassin, but behind his horrifying act lay the shadowy hand of a twisted mastermind. Grant Boyette, 18, Bible student-turned-Hitler-lover and devil-worshipper, was a diabolical Pied Piper who used a fantasy role-playing game to program six high school students with hate, Satanism, and animal torture.
"Murder Is Gutsy And Daring." Those were the chilling words of Luke Woodham, now serving three consecutive life sentences. The horror he unleashed serves as a disturbing reminder of today's shocking epidemic of high school shootings, and that the one place America's kids are supposed to be safe has become the most dangerous place of all.
There's a lot of reviews here that are slamming this book as terribly written or unbearable. I tend to ask, "What did you expect?" This was pulpy crap back when it was originally released, and it still is. How do I know? I was barely a pre-teen when I first picked this book up at Wal-Mart, in my small rural Louisiana town, and now I am in my thirties, having re-read this as I work at a community college in Arizona, and needed something to help keep me sitting still.
The book follows the life of Luke Woodham and his meeting Grant Boyette, forming the "Kroth," the school shooting at Pearl, and the trials that followed. Personally, the book is an interesting account and formation of how and why Luke Woodham would turn the gun on his classmates. He had a terrible childhood, his family life was awful, and he had manipulative people surrounding him. He also made the fatal mistake of thinking the world owed him.
That being said, I also make no excuses for Woodham. I had friends who rose out of houses that had no running water, only MREs to live on, and now make 70-80K a year due to hard work and busting their ass. They have wonderful families, and are some of the nicest, kindest, and most intelligent humans I know. Woodham chose to shroud himself in negativity and give in. Some people find faith to help them, others video games or art, music, and even books. I can relate to the latter. I grew up weird in a town of 1,100. I hated it, hated most of the people, and was single and felt alone. I had a very small friend group as well. I kept my head down and looked towards the future. That being said, I had some support, and it makes me wonder if the police or any other adults actually gave that kid any support would he have turned out different?
That doesn't justify the actions and the deaths of Dew or Menefee, even his mother. The accounts, the photos, and what happened were mind-blowing to me as a teenager, and even now it is harrowing. I went to school, and now I teach, and the idea of having my students harmed on campus absolutely hurts my heart. The loss of life is never needed, but knowing the students he took from their families were the only ones who were nice to him? What an asshole.
That being said, the book falls apart after the shooting, mostly focusing on the cops and detectives, and I appreciate he shows there was quite a bit of inadequacy there, and then the ensuing trials, which is hard to read and follow. There's a bit of Woodham sympathy there, and that will divide you based on your feelings and views, but I'll say the "religious morality" portions were hard to read, as I am not a person of faith, and know how much it treated me terribly in my small town. Again, it all depends on your personal views (tomayto/tomahto).
It's a pretty short read and easy, pulpy book to get into on a lunch break or just to past time, just don't expect Dostoyevsky, more Daytime TV, and you'll be fine!
Decent book. Well written and moves along at a decent pace. The book is fairly objective although I do wish it went a bit deeper into Boyette's life. It seemed to end that aspect of the book abruptly and without resolution.
A good book about a teenager who became a school shooter. A lot of back story to explain how he got to that point. Lots of information on how his friends helped shape him into a person that willingly took his rifle to school and opened fire.
It’s super depressing cause nothing has changed and school shootings still happen all the time. This case is pretty outdated but I still found it interesting!
1. Incels have been around since there was a word for it 2. Role playing games are not the problem 3. Prayers are useless
Not the best true crime book but I wanted to learn more about this case. Did not know that he claimed he was in a cult and he blamed others. His mum who cared for him alone and did her best although apparently very controlling but that is not an excuse to kill.
What a weasel. I did find the author blaming the other kids and yes I am sure they had some influence but later on this Woodham kid was shown to be a spoiled narcissist with no empathy so he is where he should be is my opinion and he should stay there.
I couldn't even finish the book. From an English major's standpoint, many High School kids could write better than this. There is a constant imbalance of random scene shifting that is distracting to the point, tha your asking yourself "What just happened." It felt like one big Benny Hill skit. I'm very surprised any self-respecting editor would let this waltz across his desk without even a half blind read through. If you want to learn more about this case, there are plenty of other books out there on it. This one, however, you can stay away from.
The book detailed everything that transpired, but I didn't find it as interesting as I had hoped for because there are now dozens of books out covering this same subject. I would recommend reading it if you are interested in what happened in Pearl, Mississippi and how easily people can be manipulated.
Sixteen year old Luke Woodham walks into his Mississippi high school, armed with a .30-30 hunting rifle. He opens fire and then calmly walks out of the school.