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Making a Psychopath
Making a Psychopath: My Journey into Seven Dangerous Minds | Mark Freestone
3 posts | 4 read | 6 to read
Find out what truly creates and defines a psychopath, from the leading expert who helped to create Killing Eve's Villanelle. Dr. Mark Freestone has worked on some of the most interesting, infamous and disturbing cases of psychopathology in recent years. His expertise has led to a consultant role on several TV series, helping them accurately portray their fictional villains. Now, he shares his phenomenal insight into the minds of some of the world's most violent real-life criminals. Angela "the Remorseless", a rare female psychopath, casually confessed to murder on national television without a hint of regret. Danny "the Borderline" switched from grandiosity to rage to despair within minutes and killed his defenseless friend without explanation. Tony "the Conman" preferred charm, intimidation and sexual abuse over physical violence and once tried to dupe someone into buying the Eiffel Tower. Jason "the Liar" had a fantasy life that led to vicious murders around Europe and preyed on those who see the good in people. Case by fascinating case, get to know seven of the most dangerous minds that Dr. Freestone has encountered over the last 15 years. These are up-close accounts of some of the most psychopathic criminals, and of what can happen if you fall victim to their supreme powers of manipulation. Exploring the many factors that make a psychopath, the complexities and contradictions of their emotions and behavior, as well as an examination of how the lives of psychopaths develop inside and outside the institutions that are supposed to contain them, Making a Psychopath opens up a window into the world of those who operate in a void of human emotionand what can be done to control them.
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review
Smartypants
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Mehso-so

As someone that reads true crime, I find criminal psychology interesting; it helps to understand the why behind the criminals and criminal activity. This was a short one, not as good as some others I‘ve read.

review
MysticFaerie
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Panpan

3⭐/5⭐ This was a very quick read. Overall, I was pretty disappointed in it. It did not delve in to any research or deeper behavioural traits of a psychopath. It was a pretty basic overview and overall, I was pretty unimpressed. I was also a little concerned at some of the conclusions that the author came to, if I'm being honest. If you're looking for book on psychopathy that has any depth whatsoever, I'd pass on this one.

LoverOfLearning Read anything by Dr. Robert Hare. I studied his work in school. Very fascinating. 2y
MysticFaerie @LoverOfLearning I studied some of his stuff in school as well, years ago. I haven't read his book yet though. Although, I keep meaning to. I always have so many other books on the go. But yes, he seems to be the authority on psychopathy... at least he used to be. I'm sure there's a lot more research now. I'm sadly not fully up to date myself. 2y
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review
Kaylamburson
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Mehso-so

I studied psych in college and have always been fascinated by various disorders so I was excited to learn more about the mind behind the psychopath. This had interesting sections here and there but it didn‘t dive as deep as I was hoping. It was less about the mental disorder and instead about some case studies for people the author didn‘t think deserved to be labeled as psychopaths.

45 likes3 stack adds