Savage Appetites

Savage Appetites

2019 • 272 pages

Ratings5

Average rating3.6

15

I liked each individual chapter - I think my favorite was the one about the Tate family and the rise of the idea of victim's rights. I wanted a little more connection/analysis between the chapters, though; I didn't feel that there was much of a through line to them all and I would have liked more trying to connect the dots about why women in particular feel drawn to true crime, and what leads people to focus on one aspect of true crime instead of another. (Also I would have been really interested to read more about whether being interested in true crime is as much of a middle-class white lady phenomenon as it seems - I say this as a middle-class white lady myself, but an unscientific survey of my friends seems to indicate that this is the case.) In reading the notes at the end, apparently most of these were published previously online or in magazines, which is not a problem at all; each chapter is obviously meticulously researched and well-written, but I did want some more connective tissue between them all.

January 21, 2021Report this review