

Criminologist Christopher Berry-Dee takes readers deep inside the dark minds of some of the most pitiless and dangerous people alive. Having spent years interviewing imprisoned criminals, including notorious serial killers, he discovered that the lack of remorse they showed was in many ways more terrifying than the crimes they had committed. Yet in the course of these conversations, the author also had the chance to interview his subjects' psychiatrists and, in doing so, uncovered a terrible truth: a monster can be hidden behind a friendly face. Some of these experts, he found, proved to have more in common with their patients than he would ever have expected. This book examines horrific crimes committed by some of the most remorseless and merciless people ever to have lived. If it reveals a mindset wholly alien to most people, it also, shockingly, demonstrates that some of the people who treat these psychopaths have their own demons. Talking with Psychopaths will inevitably shift the reader's view of psychopaths, and in doing so, reveals that horror can be much closer to us than we think. Subjects include JR Robinson, Kenneth Allen McDuff, Arthur Shawcross, Kenneth Bianchi, Michael Bruce Ross, Melanie McGuire, and more. Review: Amazing - Good book Review: Lwk boring asf - I couldnโt understand this book.
| Best Sellers Rank | #135,483 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #306 in Medical Psychology Pathologies #326 in Criminology (Books) #519 in Popular Psychology Pathologies |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 847 Reviews |
J**O
Amazing
Good book
N**A
Lwk boring asf
I couldnโt understand this book.
T**N
DO NOT BUY
I wish I returned it when I had the chance. The author spent over 70 pages talking about random stuff that had literally nothing to do with psychopaths. I had to put the book down and never touched it again. Horribly written, seemingly didnโt have an editor, and shouldnโt have been published at all. Save your time and your money.
E**D
Book
You know it wasn't what i was expecting at all, so i ended up returning it.
K**R
Meh
The writters appoinions are very sujective. He spends a good portion of the book trying to get you to buy his other books.
G**T
Psychopathy, under the Lordship of Christ, isnโt a flaw.
To the Author, and to Those Whoโve Only Seen the Hollywood Version of Me: I just finished reviewing your book on psychopathy, and Iโll be honestโI'm offended. Not because you described evil. But because you flattened something sacred into a caricature. I am a psychopath. And before you leap to conclusions, know this: I am also a man of God. I know who I am, and Iโve come to understand the architecture of my mind not as a curse, but as a gift. A weapon forged by the hand of the Creator for a specific kind of work. Psychopathy, when untethered from truth, can become dangerous. But when submitted to the Spirit of God, it becomes surgical. Focused. Unrelenting. Able to cut through noise, emotion, and manipulation. Thatโs not dysfunction. Thatโs prophetic wiring. The prophets of old werenโt โwell-adjusted.โ They were intense, confrontational, emotionally disassociated at timesโobsessed with truth over comfort. Many were loners, misunderstood, labeled madmen or worse. And yet, they heard God. Weโve let Hollywood redefine psychopathy as synonymous with serial killers and villains. But I say this: many of us were made this way by design. We are the edge-dwellers. The gatekeepers. The ones who donโt flinch in the face of chaos. That doesnโt make us evilโit makes us essential. Iโm not writing this to pick a fight. Iโm writing this to reclaim a truth you may have never seen. Psychopathy, under the Lordship of Christ, isnโt a flaw. Itโs a call. โGary Mallett
S**A
Baffling that this got published
Iโm shocked that this book was published the way it is. It feels like it didnโt have an editor. The author has a lot of interesting experiences with psychopaths, but heโs a poor writer (lots of his sentences just DID NOT make sense, the grammar was often atrocious, and there were numerous typos) and his disdain for psychology and neuroscience destroys any credibility he might otherwise have. He imposes his own moral views onto stuff and while he does obviously have a decent understanding of how psychopaths think (its interesting reading how he was able to โplayโ some of them to get information out of them), he doesnโt seem to understand the โwhyโ - and he expresses in the book that he has little interest in understanding it.
W**T
Yellow Press fluff
This is NOT in any way a "study," nor is it a penetrating "journey into the evil mind." It is a superficial, lurid, poorly written, repetitive sensationalistic little fluff-piece on the level of National Enquirer. Try Fromm's Anatomy of Evil; Dutton's The Wisdom of Psychopaths; or even Thomas's Confessions of a Sociopath.
M**E
So interesting
Really passionate about true crime and the psychologie of serial killer and this book is serving you on the spot!
U**A
Iโll give five star for the journey i had through this book
A must read book for all
T**R
Great book, interesting facts
Really loved this book. So many interesting facts.
R**S
Very Interesting
As a student of Criminology, this book helped a lot. It provides excellent case study material of the criminals who were interviewed by Christopher. Itโs quite a lengthy read and is very informative and interesting. Definitely worth your time.
A**.
Brilliant
Brilliant
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