Search - I Have Lived in the Monster : Inside the Minds of the World's Most Notorious Serial Killers (St. Martin's True Crime Library)

I Have Lived in the Monster : Inside the Minds of the World's Most Notorious Serial Killers (St. Martin's True Crime Library)
Larger
I Have Lived in the Monster : Inside the Minds of the World's Most Notorious Serial Killers (St. Martin's True Crime Library)
Author: Robert K. Ressler, Tom Shachtman

Book Information
Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks
Book Type: Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780312964290 - ISBN-10: 0312964293
Publication Date: 3/15/1998
Pages: 272

Book Description:
From their gruesome, body-strewn lairs, to the darkest regions of their twisted psyches, Robert K. Ressler shows you serial killers as you've never seen them before.

In his phenomenally successful Whoever Fights Monsters, Robert K. Ressler examined his brilliant twenty-year career hunting down killers for the FBI. Now, delving deeper than ever before into the criminal mind, Ressler recounts his years since leaving the FBI, working as an independent criminal profiler on some of the most famous serial murder cases of our day.

Ingeniously piecing together clues from crime scenes, along with killing patterns and methods, Ressler explains his role in assisting the investigations of such perplexing international cases as England's Wimbledon Common killing, the ABC Murders in South Africa, and the deadly gassing of Japan's subway. We're also witness to Ressler's fascinating, in-depth interviews with John Wayne Gacy, the first and last one America's most prolific serial killer would ever grant, plus a shockingly candid discussion with "cannibal killer" Jeffrey Dahmer.

Daring to understand the depraved minds of serial killers, Robert K. Ressler returns from the deepest abyss with an unforgettable account that is as riveting as it is shocking.

Members who requested this book also requested:

Similar books to this author and title:
Whoever Fights Monsters : My Twenty Years Tracking Serial Killers for the FBI (St. Martin's True Crime Library)ObsessionThe Cases That Haunt UsThe Anatomy of Motive : The FBI's Legendary Mindhunter Explores the Key to Understanding and Catching Violent CriminalsMindhunter : Inside the FBI's Elite Serial Crime Unit


Genres:

Please Rate these Book Reviews

Kevin G. (sackett) wrote on 7/6/2009...


This was an interesting read, albeit not as interesting as Ressler's first book, Whoever Fights Monsters. The focus this time is more on international crimes than domestic ones, and the cases covered are from Ressler's post-FBI consulting rather than his in bureau investigations. While this does allow coverage of some lesser known/media-exploited crimes; overall, I found these cases less satisfying both in a cultural and a psychological context than his bureau investigations have been ... perhaps because much of his consulting involvement is engaged as post facto analysis in the courtroom phase of the crime rather than being focused on the identification and apprehension phase of getting the psychos off the street. There's also a significant chunk of interview transcription from Ressler's interviews-while-incarcerated with John Wayne Gacy and Jeffrey Dahmer that I found a bit dry in the read of it, but Ressler's commentary on what is being said and why it is being said is some of the more interesting insights offered. All in all, for someone interested in Ressler's work after retiring from the BSU, this is worth reading even if it doesn't match the more interesting and less politically polarized "Whoever Fights Monsters." If the work doesn't interest you in and of itself, however, Ressler indulges in enough "I did this" and "I did that" and "I didn't do that even though my rivals say I did it" rhetoric this go round to be actively offputting, often making the book read more like a rebuttal to personal criticism levied by his peers than it does the kind of fascinating insight into the criminal mind Ressler can deliver when he chooses to worry less about what people think of him and more about the crimes he's discussing.

Brenda R. (nurse) wrote on 11/18/2007...


This book not quite as good as whoever fights monsters but still has insight into tracking down and getting inside the mind of a serial killer. Contains interviews with Gacy and Dahmer. Also discusses cases he was called in to advise in Japan,and other countries. There also was a case here in the U.S. regarding a citizen who shot a japanese exchange student. The student was thought to be an intruder when in reality was attempting to go to a party and reached the wrong house. That was not only a misuse of firearms but a miscarriage of justice. Jack the Ripper it also discussed.

Lewella T. (lewella) wrote on 1/14/2007...


Not as flowing as John Douglass' books but a good read.

Brett L. wrote on 6/12/2006...


This is a very interesting book on the psyches of murderers and the techniques used to catch them.

Patti B. (Purefoyfan) wrote on 12/6/2005...


Sort of interesting, though I wasn't thrilled with it, my daughter liked it.


Book Wiki
Series
Original Publication Date (YYYY-MM-DD)
People/Characters
Real Places
Fictional Places
Important Events
Awards and Honors