Reviews

Women Who Kill: Profiles of Female Serial Killers by Carol Anne Davis

cecilyroseceillam's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

3.0

natrix's review against another edition

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dark informative medium-paced

3.0

horrorqueen's review against another edition

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5.0

This was a really informative and supremely interesting book.

It is a must for anybody interested in the female serial killer or, indeed, the female criminal, as it gives lots of insight into the minds and workings of these women, and speculates upon why they may have committed their crimes.



It profiles, in a fair amount of detail, 14 female serial killers. Whilst not giving every detail of their lives, this book does 'break you in' to their story, and provides a great background to each woman.



It is a really good starting place for anybody interested in these crimes and criminals, and provides a springboard for further research and reading in the area.

theremightbecupcakes's review against another edition

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informative sad

2.0

I read it before her Children Who Kill book, and she made the same erroneous statement in both books, without sourced material. I say it's erroneous as a former (disabled) therapist, who has studied this material in great detail, and I quote directly: 
Psychologists say that everyone who attempts suicide has at one stage wanted to kill someone else.
What psychologists? Who? This is a false, dangerous, and hurtful statement, and again, it's in both books. There can be anger and even rage involved in some suicidal ideation. Not all. And those feelings are not always aimed at other people. This really disturbed me, to the point of almost DNF.

beata's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional sad tense medium-paced

3.5


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sputnikslove's review against another edition

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2.0

2.5/5

ddemille29's review against another edition

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1.0

This book was full of glaring errors, grammatical, spelling-related, and factual. (The factual can be forgiven, almost, due to being written thirteen years ago, though I do believe some of the information about some of the killers and their partners was probably available, but there are many interpretations since no one in the public can know exactly what happened.) However, I seriously could not get past the extremely poor editing. (If there WAS an editor, they need to be sacked immediately.) The spelling was terrible - and speaking of the spelling - if you're writing a true crime book, and talking about ANY killer, who people know well, you might want to spell their name right. (Bernardo, not Barnardo. Yes, I'm Canadian, but spell your subjects' names right, come on.) There was no excuse for the spelling. And there was no excuse for the grammar, and the lack of proper punctuation drove me up the wall. It makes for a very distracting read.

I also felt that I wasn't really getting any information or insights. It felt like a Wikipedia account of these women, and if I want that, I'll go to Wikipedia. (Though I never want that, as I abhor Wikipedia.) It had no insights into their psyches. You could tell she tried, but it was the same recycled theories, and a lot of it was very generalized, and a lot of it was obviously her own bias intruding, and she was judging the women without analysing them. Her discussion of feminism, and women being considered to be gentle and nurturing, would have been more interesting if she had actually discussed that and hadn't just repeated the same information about the women over and over.

All in all, I was very disappointed, and also very glad I didn't pay to read this. Poorly edited books will always get scathing reviews for me, and she lost credibility the first time she spelled someone's name wrong. (As she often mixed up victims' names and spellings of those names, as well as perpetrators' names.) It was a good idea, but the long chapters were on the most famous cases, and I would have liked to have seen more information on the lesser known people, but I don't believe enough real research was done to enable that.

horrorqueen's review

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5.0

This was a really informative and supremely interesting book.

It is a must for anybody interested in the female serial killer or, indeed, the female criminal, as it gives lots of insight into the minds and workings of these women, and speculates upon why they may have committed their crimes.



It profiles, in a fair amount of detail, 14 female serial killers. Whilst not giving every detail of their lives, this book does 'break you in' to their story, and provides a great background to each woman.



It is a really good starting place for anybody interested in these crimes and criminals, and provides a springboard for further research and reading in the area.
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