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I: The Creation Of A Serial Killer (2015)

I: The Creation of a Serial Killer (2015)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.9 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0312241984 (ISBN13: 9780312241988)
Language
English
Publisher
st. martin's press

About book I: The Creation Of A Serial Killer (2015)

You may wonder why I would give five stars to a book I didn't finish--nor am likely to finish any time soon.Jack Olsen, who died in 2002 at the age of 77, was much more than a crime writer. He was a gifted and insightful psychological analyst who might have been a neuroscientist in another life. His interest in violent crime focused not so much on the victims of murder but on the "victims" who committed murder. A quotation cited in his obituary in the Seattle PI sums up his approach:"I start every book with the idea that I want to explain how this 7 or 8 pounds of protoplasm went from his mommy's arms to become a serial rapist or serial killer. I think a crime book that doesn't do this is pure pornography."In recent years, new discoveries in brain science have begun to explain some of the phenomena that Jack Olsen understood instinctively and documented again and again:1. Some people are born with brain disorders that make them inclined toward cruelty and violence.2. Exposure to violence and abuse can change the brain in a way that makes people inclined toward violence.3. People who commit violent acts are human beings who may be "normal" in many respects.I had the privilege of meeting Jack Olsen several times. (On one memorable occasion, he spoke to a psychology class I was taking and took the whole class out for coffee.) He was passionately interested in people and what makes them tick. I hope the world will soon be ready to go back and reread what he wrote, mining his detailed case studies for information on how to change society to prevent the creation of monsters who, as often as not, are victims themselves of our tolerance for cruelty, violence, and revenge.In I: The Creation of a Serial Killer, the truth is too close to the surface. I can't read it right now--but the problem is definitely in me and not in this remarkable book.

A book written largely using the words of a serial killer is an interesting concept and one that I thought would help to provide fresh insight into an overcrowded true crime/serial-killer-profiling genre. But here's the thing: I don't think he's an interesting or insightful subject. He's a lying sadist who provides chapters of unchallenged borderline torture porn. Balancing the chapters from the POV of the killer with that of police or journalists who investigated the crimes might have helped to balance this story out -- that is provide a better gauge of reality -- rather than a focus so tightly on the father-son dynamic with a few footnotes indicating when a contradiction arises in their recollections.

Do You like book I: The Creation Of A Serial Killer (2015)?

A four-star book that continuously pisses me off in memory for Jack Olsen's insertion of himself as a personality into the telling. Keith Hunter Jesperson was no one's idea of a genius while Jack certainly was, and here would be the place to mention that I loved Jack Olsen's "The Rape of the Town of Lovell", "The Misbegotten Son" (about another serial killer) and "Son" (about a serial rapist). But having made a long and illustrious career out of true crime writing, he was surprisingly useless in his unfamiliar role as an expert on the subject of crime. At no time could he tell Jesperson's life story better than Jesperson himself, yet he only sporadically got the hell out of the way.There has never been a title based more in an author's hubris, Olsen having imagined that he had distilled a small universe down to a single letter, and to understand this choice of a main title is to know where this book misses. So clearly can I see it in my mind, Jack placing a tape recorder down in front of Keith and asking him a bunch of questions about himself. Naturally, in answer, Keith uses the word "I". He uses it over and over because he's continuously being asked to talk about his life, and at some point Jack just gets fed up with what he asked to hear. This 'I' starts to stick like a ringing in his ears that he winds up blaming Keith for, and it ends up becoming his title.
—Tommy Walker

This is definitely one of the better true crime books out there. The murders themselves are perhaps not so noteworthy as far as serial killers go. They are not complex torture scenarios with knives and acids. They are the simple games played by a man fascinated by the pain inflicted through murder, and Olsen's writing captures the gritty struggle of ending a life.Perhaps most important to note about this book is contained in the title. All of the murdering and generally sick behaviour is written in the first person. This cold perspective is a haunting experience that stays with you after putting down the book.A must read for anyone who enjoys learning of the agonizing moments victims feel or the vacuous soul expressed through a murderer's recollection.
—Paulie Dude

Keith is a killer who wants attention. His audacity and arrogance were his weapons and he loved what he did.A No remorse narcissistic waste of oxygen.It always amazes me with every book i read on serial killers that the common denominator is charm.Serial killers can turn it on and turn it off at will fooling even those closets to them. A lot of people a truly beautiful on the inside and serial killers are hideous creatures on the inside. I'ts a pity they don't look like their inner self as we wood be able to recognize them what they truly are.A monster!
—Troy Cook

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